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DO YQU WANT A REAL PINE UMBRELLA ? 


We baive them from $20 to $40 
: $3 to $10. 


Challoner & Mitchell, 


'Plione 675. JEWELERS. 


In cheaper styles we have 
«= targe variety from 


H 


j 


ie 


New Goods... | 


Now that the excitement of the Sale is over, 
we will devote our attention to the collection 
of new and seasonable offerings, acquainting 
you from time to time as the new goods arrive. 


“This Week 


Beauty Pins and Blouse Sets. 
Crush Belt Buckles and Collar Buckles. . 
New Fashionable Watch Guards from 35c. 


A few new and striking effects in Ladies’ 
Silk and Chiffon Ties . 


The Huteheson 0.1 iLd... 


poco ee 
acduias 


} 


We are showing 
some Novelties ia 


da ii 


eee 13. 


It's Just This Way 


Our prices are made for you, 
dott profit by them It Is you're tows, Tt’ 
part of our business, polley to please pat 
rons 60 well th they alwags return with 
their future trade 


See our Windows for 
Saturday Bargains. 


16c. Tis 
Se. Tia 


Deviled Grabs ...... 
Bioater Paste 

Shrimp Paste . 
Maddock P 

Armour's &' 

Armour's Sliced Bacon 


Se. Tin 
30c. Tin 
. 30c. Tin 


Freestone Peaches for preserving. 


Dixi H. Ross & Co 


eeeeee 


The most ‘progressive builders demand 
The 


best hardware for thelr work 
, ae imteltigent come to us, They know 
=e give them the best goods and make 
the prices right for them. They are satle 
Ged that ‘wewto better for them than any 


other dealer and ave «lad to show they 
walue our methods .Ly coming to us. 


-Nicholles & Renouf, Ltd. 


Cor. Yates and Broad streets, 
Victoria, B. C. 


a 


‘ONE WEEK ONLY—— 


200 Boys’ Suits 


} Plenty of money to han, 


PENA AMIEL AYU RABE wee OV AAR RE ae 


VICTORIA, B.C., MON DAY, AUGUST 14 


1899, 


TO LET 


Hotel Brunswick; 


Furnished or tinfurnished—..—.. 
“96 rooms, exclusive of dining room, office, etc, 


B.C. LAND & INVESTMENT AGENCY, © | ie 
An Attempt to. Assewanais Maitre Labori) 


’ 


WHITE 
CASTILE! 
SOAP... 


| 

| 

af 

| The Porest-Manafactured 
1] Made from Pure Olive Ol. 
| 

| 

| 

} 

i 

} 


2 
4OKN COCHRAN 


~ Let Us Flt You Us Fill Your Prescription. 


a Per Pound. 
See our window 


CHEMIST. 
N.W. COR, YATES 
a OOUGLAS $138. 


THIS weeK 


Large cor. jot with house, Jobnson 

atreet. .... oe». Cheap 
Lot.and cottage, Maple street, for..$1,400 
Cholee lot, Fort street, two front. ij 
ages A Bargnin 
Lot and cottage, for. 450 
Tot and cottage, $1,400 
The Old Brewery 
~ BEreet . Miat He Bart 
Trice cortages te lot: at Oak Ray, Cheap 
When tnsuring your house give me a GiTT. 
low Fates. 


, Johnson street. 
Fort street, for. 
Property, Fort 


‘ 


AIR et oe HHAMAGE? 


and if you i 


} 


Sc. Tin | 


Coal and weed, best quality. 


P. C. MACGREGOR, 


NOTARY PUBLIC, 
2 GOVERNMENT STREET, 


Re ee ee Pa I 


| A. W. JONES 


“ 
FIVE SIST| RS BLOCK 


Real Estate, 
Insurance ana 
Financlal Asent. 


“ 


oe 


Galedontaninsurance Go,( 
Phoenix ar Go. 


MONEY 10 LOAN 


bee ARAAANRAR AT nt 


— TWO 
WOMEN 


<s sums front $1,000 .to 
$40,000 ow good security 


REM BE aT 


By MARY E. HITCHCOCK. 


LONDIKE 


of the week.”—New 


entertaining book:**=Mont 
real Star, 
“What People want _to know is 


just what the Ilfe itself is Hke, apd 


REAPER sicccenl SO REN 


—=—— FOR CASH | Works at Van Anda, Texada Island, B.C. 


this Mra. Hitcheock telle us.” Vie 
torta Colonist. 

“Full of fresh and fascinating to 
terest. '>- Victoria Times, 

PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED. 
frat edition, which 
is being rapidly exhausted, to be ob 
ained only by, subscription. Tele 
phone or call at Driard hotel, where 
subscription, Het new open. 


Coples of the 


Sroelter 
Manager. 


Pres., Trese and 
General Mr nager. 


| 
’ 
THOS. KIDDIE, | 
| 
} 
| 
| 


VAN ANDA- +e a telephone call oT. 


COPPER & GOLD 60. 


Purchasers a Smetters 


~OF— 


ae 


FOR SALE | 


seename sar SALEL LL 


GAS: 
a 


40 GOVERNMENT STREET. 


FT EENORY: 


inate tee 


While on. His Way to the 


groseeseocenors 


PLUME | 
HCE 


ol She ere 


(Associated Presa) 
Ang, 14.—Two men ambushed 


counsel 


Rennes, 


Maitre” Latort, for “Drep tas. 


Oxe-shot.wasfired, hitting Labori in the 


back, Laborl fell in the roadway stil 


JUICE 


ere ercosos 


Labort left his house for the edurt at 


nidbroing, His residence iq sita- 


about a quarter of 
the 
beside 


the suburbs, 
route 


the 


irs walk from the Lgeee, 
alot solitary road 

river Vilais He reached 2 point halt 
Lowey on hie journey, when two mes, who 
had -evideatty Fuab- 

od out of a narrow lane, and-one of them 

! red a singic shot from arereiver. “Ihe 
} mur erer fled through the 


woken Soman, Se a had omorged,.and 


) 


Devt dying -ip wet, 


Hudson’s 
. Ba 


Y sett mpret 


Com pany 


ra immediately 


Ne ee 


both eseape 
| At TO it 
bullet had « 


that the 
There 
ph) 


snnounced 
“) the stomach. 
ard bleeding, and the 


was 


Believe Labori Will Die; 


tater 
if the 


Wholesale Distributary Agents. 


Labori was 
man who tired 


stery has it that 


EPL AL EE Ea ciel ere EN temple by a 


prolver at him ontaide"the court, and 


SVVVVTVTisesesesese 


a co 
FOR the 
COOKING ¢| 


neantwas arrested’ Only 
laborers going to work saw 
crime ex The 


18 the morderers could » 


imitted spot Was well 
ot be seen 
ad upon him, the 
being lidden by 
afforded 


pussing back 


chasen 
by 


se they” rush 


the 


Labort 
lane 
they 


Me 


means of 


THE GAS COMPANY are loaning eOTET, were 
and ting FREE OF CHARGE 


Gad Cooking and Heating Stoves 


Fuel Gas, $1.25 per Mi cubic feet. 


escape by 


AEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 


lead, 
hig 


WANTED—O1d copper brass, 2iac, 
scrap tron, rope, canvas and sacks; 
eat prices g veg Apply Victoria 
Agency, 30 Store street, B 


Agent. 


can be. seen at the 
Lower Governme 
L, Blanks’, old F 


Goverument street. - 


Stoves 
Works, 
and at 
bullding, 


>= 22244 46s 4 eS 


Miuder 


al LOST. On Oewego street, door key 
£4 please leave at Times office 

umlay night on Cadboro  ibuy 
n Mose street and Chestnat 
Reward for return 


Cn Be 
road, bhetwe 
aveuné, fur Tipypet. 
| to Thwes office, 


| WHOTLRSADH” Priors 

Rastern Creamery 
quantities ; 

in blocks 


CITY AUCTION MART ${ "==" 


The Only Central Rooms in the City 


W. JONES, 


AUCTIONEER, 
No. 73 YATES STREET 


2.000 tre, Chatce 
fairy Putter, to 
Fresh Chilliwack 
Fine | Cheese, ete. 


and 
also, 


MAN 
ia 


YOUNG 
and ‘reom 
W. EL a, 


You 
ele, the 
geney, 115 
rostey, & Co. 


REE) tor Chalniess 
w Spin Roller Gear, at the 

jovernment street Jobn 

Telephone 083. 


NUT COAL, BACK COAL, 
Telephone GM. Munn, 
Trounce and Broad 


HAVE 
Buys and -sells furniture to any amount 


for spet cash. 
Residential sales a sprcigity 


Wei L FU RNISHED ROOMS, single. or 
sulte; moderna comventences; good dining 
rooms Sample rooms for commercial 
Use M. Walt, The Vernon, 66° Dougiaa 


street, 
e menalioes 


COAL AND WOOD — Daker ‘& Colston, 
meet and Ea a na 
terpphour 5 ner 

ioe Oddy’s, telephone 401. 


HASTIE’S FAIR | 


FOR 


PER TON New Wellin, 


verre 


in and Enamelwates’ 


~ 77 GOVERNMENT STREET. 


— (oe cher_right hand 


sogssetcecss oesoogoeos 
DPOVOPOGOSO 


j 
; 


Junk | 
Aaronsot,~ 


bp threw, hersell by 


Court Martial. 


Wilh PER 


‘The Fortner Does Not Believe Esterhazy Was the Author of | bérderean, whieh witness e! 
the Borderéau--Former’ President’ of France Contras” 
dicts the General’s Statement. 


Wars 


5 . 
throeech the kine, which lee to the coun- 
try. 

One cummed 


said 


of the laborers 
who witnessed the 

“As T wis Walkhig” Win? he reds 
a tall man walkiag in the 


shooting, 


saw direction 


not Lhnuues. He was on the towing path 


of 
lounge 
was M. 
bridge 


the Vitsine: dark 


suit and wore 


was attired’ in a 
a bowler bat, 

ached -the 
falling 
the Vilaine, nwo men of medium height, 
wearlug dark suits and rx soft felt 
hata, emerged from the path and eutered 
the One 


Labori, Just as he 


crossing the stream into 


wad 


mala roadway, 


Drow a Rexolver_and Fired 


point-blank 1t—heberk— Hewes -#0-near 


that it was quite impossible ty miss 
‘Lhere Wave a osdkes ps aenpeent edie b- bea rd 
ap his? urn 

a common bre 


fell that 


two ot 


Labori. as he threw 
“Ho, la laf 
expression), 
facy I 
but the 
the 


for 


(which is och 


nd he fipen 


and one ef hers ran up, 


murderéra had vanished dowa 


Hel 
Geodarmes quickly 
after 
Labori.” 

M. Labor 
Tf aind ex 
which lie 
head for 
he 
hix head in her lap. 


ding 


was imuredigtely 


arrived, and 


soon werd w sent to Madame 


arried bie papers, Wider his 
« pillow until his wife 
half raised himself and 
A number of labor 
beside  the- rivers 
heard the shouts of ‘Murder, stop him, 
raise? by the porsuers. One man plac 
el himself in the way of the miirderer 
him with the revolver, 
shoutel, “Letme poss; | heve shot Drey 
fus.” The back he 
drew aside 
the 
to. proces), 
After shooting 
be murderer ran 
he reached the railroad, crossed the 
bunkment und followed the track 
he arrival at a tevet crossings A 
Was }itet- arriving at 
murderer dashed across th 
front-of the train toward the 
the direction of the village of Chantepie, 
he was lost to view 
Colonel .Piequart and-~ his 
tow; M who, it appears, from later 
reports, accompanial Labor the 
to Lyced, pursued the murderer for # 
distative, but being heavy mien they were 
unable to continue the 
turned to the wounded min 
of the man to & tum 
peasants aad laborers who 
they beard the would-be murder 
or say, when cross! the marshy field 
“If I ean get away, I will go for them.” 
Madame Labori wag promptly 


Notified of, the 


arrived, 
when yped 


ers wok stones 


wh covering 
man was #0 ‘taken 
amd allowed 


Would.Be Assassin 


lawyer the 
fields 


the 
across the until 
em 
notil 
train 


line 


where 
brother-in 
Gast, 


1 ow way 


pursuit ‘aod rr 
leaving the 
chase 


ber of 
declare 


Crime 

She rushed to her bushwad, aud foand 

him with his head on the sidewalk, She 

his side, “aud taking his 

— ia fer Hipy fanned hin are 
Was perfectly ell, There 

' pol from his lips as his head rested on 


~dre dap-wt bis -wife;whe,-by—the sway, bs 
As she fanued bln with | 


a Amertoan, 
she 
her left. He tried 
mastered her feelings 


caressed -bim- with 
to smile back, She 
and did everything 


| possible to caae her husbands agony; 


“ It is reported that the famoue lawyer 

wie as he lay wounded on the ground, 

rm die from this, but Dreyfus. is 
Official Bulletin 

Rennes, Aug. 14.—{8:30 2.1.)—Phe. fol- 


TEE) NAO NSA UTE 


Pstour, | 


It} 


ory: 


his | 


worttd—> 


full speed and the } 


woods in| 


was—notr a} 


’ 


RNR ALATEST DQEL RAT ERS 


137. 


NO. 


frowvted: with 31.01 
presifent of Franc 

The latter declared that Merviews « 
ibid om the witness stand on Satur 
of the imminence of war between 
many and Frande in 1804 was grossly ¢x- 
aggerated, and compluined ofthe action 
of the then Minister of War (Mercier), 
in moving sifty thousand troops to the 
frontier witheut consulting him. 

As it was M, Labovi's tisk 
General Mercier-In hand and Dems 
associate counsel, wis qiite 


sada Pavier’ fore. 


ory 


Dnprepared for the 7 - 
the few questions pat were of prac 
ly Httle effect, and Mercer 
cheaply. Moreover, M, Demange was 
deeply affected ‘by :the attempt to os- 
} sassinate Nis cdlleague, aud_avua_guite 
unable to do justice to hinwelf, 

M. Deniange announced that though 
his colleagve’s wound hot so sert 
ous as at first sappdsed, it would be im- 
possible for the latter to participate in 
the proceedings 

When General. Mercier 

reply to the president of th 
{ reiteeated his beodiet that Majer-ter 

Exierhagy, in of the tatters 

} declaration, was not the aathor 


esen 


wis 


Was reenl! 
mt 
mawn 
ihe 


spite 


Himmel v 


| Written ow tracing paper and was found 


in as-embresy, 
The president axked 

li 

| 

/ 


the 


M. ¢ 
circumstances. of 


i simmige bor 
ler to explain the 


confession 
Dreyfus is Alleged to Have Made 


to Captain Lebrun Renault. M. ( 
mirPerier: insisted on his statemeht of 
Saturday that lie never PAV We Poh 
fidences-of this’*cheracter from Captain 
| Lebron Renault. He nh lent M 
}-Dupus, then .premier,.was present.whep 
} Captain Lebrate Renantt~ called at 
Bly see. *Moresrer,” adds M 
+ mir-Porier, “here is a fetter ‘froin 
Dapuy whieh I ask°may bx 

The letter asserted that rea 
braun Renaal, wher qu 1 by 
Dupuy, replied that Gener: al Mi reier had 
tit hin to, the pre to reer ry 
“dressing down’ Tor. a a wi Tinerest a 
| clogtire the Figaro: 
j. Gienerat Mercier bere interruptet. 
ing? “Captain Lebruy Renault spot 
| me in regard to the confeesions | 
presence of General Gonz, who wilt t 
fy theret It was then that + 
| ed him to go to the 
probbientt <a NTA 
Reylying to Mercier’ 
Saturday on the witne 

rier shid. Me 


to interver 


A Diplomati 


asi- 


that 


the 


ML. 


Lies 
M; 


s- 
to 


say- 
to 
the 
sti- 
0 


presi of the 


sent} 


such hate 
ednferred’ with the qinister, 
f » the impression: 
COnNVErSSLON Was onc 
otherwise’ the 
1 closed witt 
had 
ing 
that the 
tin. If there 
sarard the 
the sixth we 
until: the 


ineic 


Berlin that 


y that 


ne telegrsr 
Ic owas_in 


ster 
ha 
Theat tier 
should 
eighth to 


replied. th 
Writ th Flrncoa P 
He rex 


could testif 


We 
minister of war, 
ral de Boisdeffre 

gardto the orders 
M. Dewoange 
ind insisted that 
1 repeat the 

orders to Ge 

to mebili 
Casimir-Perler, 

salt he did not dest 
General, Mer “2 ‘ins 
wish to 
president 
too sad and 
for me to describe, T am mast 
ef and my conscience =) 
state thet General Mortter 
every effort to 
Mix Me as Deeply 

affair, but” I 


seized 


} than 


resun " 
ti rent: 
“tain of 
la not 
former 
- are 


tlon«, anewer 


“The 


oo tr 


eald the 


ae Possible 
in. this réiained 
aloof,” | 

The former president 
} complained of the 
his subordinate toward the. cbief 
state, “As an instence,” says M, ¢ 
jailer Perle wal. Mercier smekenioett 
to shorten aof service vfs xty 
thousand “Mee without consultiig te 
} chief of the stiite, thus lacking he 
respect” he owrd-to~the-chiet -—oi-~ ihe. 
staic.” 

M, CashoirPerler next protiatal 
assertion made by General Mercier io 
regard to the rude adopted. by the chief 
of the state in this affair, whereupon 
the General interjected that he ~ bad 
spoken of the attitule assumed by Al, 
| Casimir-Perier, heeause he bad sworn to 
tell the whole truth, 

M, Demange asked M. Cusimir-l 


have 


vent 
ot 
of 


France 
behavie 


incorrect 


he 


: 
if-esoch an woderstending had not been a | 
srrivet ar between France aod bier : 
many on the subject of Dreyfue 
—M.- Casimir Perterrepliet- that “befsre————— 
the interview with the orinistér of the 
sixth 


Rates on application. 


/CORRCING IRII sh 


na FLAVOR 


| Use Mellor’s Mixed Paints) m1 2¢o-~ cone 


‘Maitre Labori was shot from bebind, 
the bait penetrating the posterior—region 
of the thorax on the right side, at the 
heighth of the fifth or sixth dorsal ver- 
tebrae, The heavy flow of blood prer 
veuts for the moment, the exploring of | 
the depth of thé wound, The sauder | 
signed doctors hope thé ball is lodged im 
the muscles enveloping the vertebral Col) why he had pot included in the dossier 
vm They muat, however, maintal™ | o¢ yaq4 the daubtful treuslation of the we q 
reserve respecting the integrity of | golem of agent “B" to. his govelme 
Inng and spinal cord. monet ae, date of Novecober 2nd: ' 

“(Signed,) Doctors Renaud, General Mercier said, not one-— 
Briasawiland Vidal." {af peteansagns, of the tela. Of 

THE COURT MARTIAT.~ . vere communicated fe, toe. Judees 

4.—On hearing the news | Secause t } exinte loubts in his min 
ae ine: ama belie te the ab- M. Demange here remarked that the 
sence of Maitre Demange, counsel for xt was commonicated to Snadherr as _ 
the Dreyfus family, who left the court cial, and therefore doubts were _lin- 
instantly when he ‘heatd of the shoot 
ing aml hurried to M. Labori'’s side, Cof- 
onel Jnuoayst, suspended the sitting of 
the court martial until 7:15. 
Later—When the eotrt 

assembled General “Mercier 


_-| B. WILLIAMS & CO. 


97 JOHNSONNSTREET 


ae balletia has been iatyed: 


Straight*Cut 


Cigarettes 


MANUFACTURED BY 


B. Houde & Co., Quebec. 


The Question of Dreyfus 
bad never been raised between them and 


Germany. 
M. Demanger asked General Mercier 


Corver Yates and 
lee Cream Soda, soc 


cupsciaci” $1.50 PER GALLON S~‘isstiew . 
Removed to New and iaeesia Premises 


Keichis, 


JW “W. MELLOR, 36-75 Fort st. Screen | Doors from $1.25 up 


BREAD Something 


New to Bread, 
Smith's Machine Roifer Bread. Try 
it. For eale by all grovers, of leave 
orders for waggou to calf. _ 


4 


| 3 
John Barnsley & Co.| 3 Are Better than the Best. 


Wholesale at B.C. Jobbing Cow 34 Store Street, Victoria. 


wituan F. BEST 


ASSATER AND 
ANALYTICAL 6 WEMIST 


(He'delberg ont. a jae of = 

Ratewisk, ‘Otter, 5 ‘froad eiregt. Kodaks, Bicycles, Fire Arms, Atmmuni- 

opposite Driard Victoria! tion, Fishing Tackle, Cricket and Tennis 
a +t Gooda, ete., in large variety. Telephone 663, 


sible, 
After M, Cavaignac and M. Hanotgux, 
former minister -of foreign affairs, had 
testified, the Soe, Sens. at noon 


NOW 116 GOVERNMENT 6T. 


re 
eon: 


martial 
was - 


j 
M. R. SMITH & CO. 


Hote! 


~ 


We aré Prompt, We are ene 


. 


seunen otrerimai UBIO 


|= 


Eta 


CORNER OF FORT AND DOUGLAS STREETS,” 
Y VICTORIA, BC. 


sat’ We are — at Our Post, 


sinpbell’s Preseription Store 


o 


MIERCIER'S EVIDENCE, 


Scenes at Saturday's Sitting of the Dreyfus 
Court Martial—The Geeeral Guarded by 
Geadarmes. 


12.—It was net until to- 


Dreyfus court mar- 


Renges, Aug. 
day's altting of the 
tial that there was any display of feeling, 
when the storm “broke it carried 
every one in court with it into a whirl- 
poot of the widest excitement: 

M.-Casimer Perier, ex-president of the 
Republic, read the text.of a dispatch re- 
ceived by Count Von Munster Ledenburg, 
at Parts, 
Petnce Hohenlohe German  Impeyp#él 
¢hancellor, which the former corpaiiun!- 
M. Casmir-Perier, duripg a visit 

ltrany 
Empepor, having év- 
trent ot Wig, Re- 

government of the Re- 

up-Exceliency to tell M. 

Casimir-Perter_ iC in-preved that ihe Ger- 
sy was never {mplicated ih the 
His Majesty hopes the 
Republic will not hesi- 
Without a 
legemt which 
regarding the 
mmpromise the 


and 


German ambassador 


tated te 
te the Biynee_palace 
th 


me Py 


nm 
Dr 


an et 
yfus pffair 


rnsfent of the 


formal 
here—con- 


German 


HOHENLOHE. 
related the facts in. conection 
with futile. effort of M.: Waldeck- 
RCUSAW US PROV aE hs Tal Gourt niir- 
tint sitting behind closed doors, and _siid 
receiyed any member of 
family. ‘ M. Casimtr-Perier 
part of his statement by 
D anid “Wpe aking very ex- 
“For the honor of th 
hit ur and 
of the Republic, 1 will not 
aid that I exchanged 4 
ptain-in the Prench army 
treason This statement 
uset appteuse 4m court, -whtch’ Jouxu- 
ly suppressed The for r 
thus_cnded his statement 
tribunal of soldiers, 
connected with a 
Germany 


(Signed) 
Witness 


the 


wilness never 
the Dreyfus 
ed this 


whic 


President 
fore this 

ym was not 

t concerning 
to second the « t 
rk-of nee ce eonttded R48 Vr 
ust emerge at last for the 
ntry, -reconciliation and 
than the 
nothing but 
state or when a 
in my respect for 
as free to make a 


mate en 
sins 1 
here w: 
this place I,m 
my, cou 
do 


sake of 
more tell 


and 


no 
whole truth 
As chief of 

always, 


can 


her 


for 
a lett 


Dreyfus 
er. which 


Demange counsel 


ip the question of 


asserted had been 

M. ¢ 
claimed he 
into by. Ca 


TH witn 


he had 


fusards 
-Perler 
ke of 
imir- 


asimir 
bl le 
itered 
& him. 
; n¢ 
al- 


engagement 


tle su 
Pre 


ure exa 


rmer 


own mind 


ement 


Perier 
y mind 
false 

Pres 


ertain 


teters 


{ ‘the 


these 

jent o 
engagements 
In 


ly 


eplied any cane 


complete jisterte 
bis ev 
brut 


who 


in 


inspired 


tr 
nducted to 
He lifted 


crucifix and 
Mer 


en walked 
and Waa 
a soldier 
ore the 
truth 
ot- 
He 
hee 


iform a*gener 


trousers tt 


His 


gave 


ks we 


vari 

Lhe 

ter 

the 

ne 

fusite 
After 

mony 

tulne 


four hours with 
at_eloven 
ing that the wit 
ve, as Drey 
utter 


arly 


1 


the 
fer Had 
reiterated 
bill ef 
focument 
proved 


faaco. 
completed his testi- 
ali the thirges. con- 
indictment, he pre- 
by the 
alleged 
engage- 
Casimir-Perier, 
hotly denounced. 

hardly left the 
‘asimir Perler Jump- 
“That's the tetver 1 


read 
the 
the 


be 


sented 
cleth 
Dre3 
ment 


oncerning 
entere¢ nto with 
Which-the latter had 
The ila breath h 
Clerk's lips when M: ¢ 
ed up and shouted, 
reall in the newspapers.’ 


iromThe 


convictions tn 18M have not suffered the 
slighteat weakening It ts forfeited by 
the deepest, study of the dossier, also by 
the inaaity of means resorted to for the 
purpose of proving the innocence of the 
condemned man of 184, In spite of the 
evidence accumulated. and In spite of the 
millions 6f money expended. 


Coionel Jnuauste then announces that 


7 


| 
| 


‘the session of court mertial-wosld te @-l 


sumed on Monday morning. 41. Casimir- 
Perier. thereupon arose id said: “Af- 
ter the deposition of ral Mercier, I 
shalt ask the coupe’to hear me, and I 
would prefer 1¢-fo in confrontation 


with him.” _~ 
the court 


As ase turned to leave 
ugfence ardse en masse and hissed 


the 

and \Aursed him, those at the back of the 

(otirt standing on chairs and_ benches 
placed themselves be- 


gendarmes 
tween the generat and the audience, 
which sh¢wed a strong disposition to mal- 
treat the former minister of war, Gé- 
tert! Mercter™ owas tehered Git of the 
room through a side door,Onem- 
erging into the the crowd outside 
cheered the general and cried “Vive 
VAr “Ah,” cried a spectator of 
the_scene_in-court, “it they “had here 
the human monster speak they Would not 
cheer, him 
One newspaper man 
rested for 


be 


court 


street 


now 
in 
General 


court 
Merle 
hima murderer, hut 
was re 


was, ar- 


as he 
tater On 


calling r 


pissed by 


the man pleased 


| Raat iN GEE SHEPPARD 


Av Spokane jaaneas ti Cizims to Have Respect 
able Coane¢tions, but Was Too Vague. ~ 


“My 
Victoria 


the chief 


If you want to know 


father is of. police 
anything 
reputation, just write 
find it right.” 
With these words @ young fellow tried 
himself withthe 
yesterday afternoon, says the 
Review Bat” wis 
In spite of his claim 
of. the -ehief of 
young Man wae 
of police of Spo- 
yked 43 8 vagrant aud. 
run out of town 


my over 


bere and‘you will is all 


to square au 
thorities 
Spokane 
blaff did npt 
that be 
of Viet 
arrested by the 
kane, He 
will probably 
day pr twe, 
H, A. Carleton was the name he gave, 
and he étated-that his age was 24 years, 
his on “that of a barber and that 
he » in the United States. 
Carleton was brought into the police 
court yesterday afternoon to testify in 
the case of Ralph Morris, who was fined 
$10. for disorderly conduct. The state 
ments thade by Carleton convinced the 
police that he either tying deliber 
ately or had row 
police officer ppen 
in the room i he 
Attorney as conducting 
the city’s case arrested this 
and that he 
over ther» 
witness 


palice 


Spokesman 
work, 

the son 
ria, the 
chief 
was bo 
“be 


was 


police 


in a 


oceupal 
was bo 


was 
not seen the 
of Seattle b 
at the time 
Kimball, who y 
that he had 
thatcity 
a vagrant 
was put to the 
“We you_ever arrested in 
wrney Roche, who was handling the 
of Morris, promptly objected to the 
m. But Carleton flared up indig 
and aoswered 
never- 


same f 
Was ¢ 
The qu n 


ow in 


nsidered 


Seattle?” 


1 was arrested in Se 
“Was 
Again 


Carleton 


‘in Seattle?” 
objected, but 
the in 
and he stat- 


your pictare taken‘ 
Afto y Roche 
was tao anxions ¢ 
to keep quiet, 
ed emphatically 

“No; it -nevér was.” 

My fathe the chief of 
Victoria, If you want to know as 
about my reputation, just write 
theresand: yon "with fmt! it ig-all right.” 

As he came - down off 
stand ‘Chief Witherspoon beckoned 
would-be-son-of-a-chiet-of-police 
him to the back of the 
throngh into the station 
hooked, as ® vagrant s 


up. 


» deny 
ference inade 


is 


soon iis 

to 
room 
Here 


was 


the 
follow 
and on 
he was 
locked 
Inquiry 
veloped the 
of Victoria 
When Cz 
the 


court 
id 


among the police offieers de 
fact that the ebief of police 
& man. named Shepard 
was seen‘in his cell lat 
day and asked about the dif- 
the names, he said: 
mistake this afternoon, My 
_suard, provincial jailer or 


ee 


is 
trleton 
erin 

rence in 

“I niade a 
Ladditiecds the 
something at Victor. 

The police are inelined to-fake bis last 
ther id something. 

Carleton came te town last Thursday 
from eastern Oregon.. He 
has been at work at Baker City, It is 
claimed he beat the landlady at the Ben 
nett block ont of his board and lodging | 
by telling ber he was going to work for | 
the Coeur d'Alene this week. To éne 
of the patrolmen-he stated that he waa | 
a tailor, At the police station he gaye} 
his occupation. as. that.of a—barber,-and 
said that. he worked in nearly every 
shop in town. “He will be — given 
choice of leaving town or standing trial 
in the police court fog Vagrancy, 


| 


vo ‘Generat—atercierterminated—_withte- 
marking to Dreyfus: * If the least doubt 
¢rossed my mind I would be the 
declare it to you and say before 
‘Captain Dreyfus, I am mistaken, 
good faith.” 

Then Dreyfus jumped to 
shouted “That what ye 
say.’5 

The audience 
‘Swhereupon the 
General Mercier 


—waouid_come 


first to 
you 
but in 


feet 


ought 


and 
to 


his 
is ru 
wild 
for 
‘tammered "y 
apt. Dreyfus tom 
mistaken In @ h I come with 
the same good faith to and I 
witi do alt in human power to repair the 
frightful error." | 
The prisener then shouted: ‘Why don't 
you ds it then.” - At this there was an- 
other. burst_of applause. General e¢Mr- 
cler, after a pause when the excitement 
had partially calmed sald; “Well no, my 


cheer, 
allence 


burst, into a 
ushers called 
ther 


and 
admit | 


~ Dawn of the teat Known 
men in county, dead, aged 


-ngarry is 


pid Iver, and cure 
biliousness, sick # beadache, jaundips, 
Dauses, | tion, ete. They are in- 
valuable to prevent # cold or break up & 
fever, Mild, gentle, certain, they are worthy 


your confidence. Purely vegetable, they 
can be taken by children ae delicate women. 
Price, 25c. at all medicine dealers or by mall 
of C, I. Hoop & Co., Lowell, Masa. . 


Rouse / the tor 


| 
wisely 


| Minister of Justice 


| Justice 
i] 


| in several_of the 


1 Devid 


} 
rinmane 
} offenters 


of’ 


} 
the Opposition, 


“whet—statement -ms~the-reaione=thst his tae 


of Justice 


Dominion 


- Parliament: SP parenk Se 


> 


Senate—Amendments to: Grard 
Trunk and Drummond County 
Bills Concurred In. 


, 


the Insertion of such a provision in the * 
present’ bill) would destroy the chances 
of some of the lines being constructed, 


‘Mr... Wallace. expressed. unaltergble op 
pbsttion to the payment of & graduated * 
way lines, bak ae. 
doting. ~ 4 
.-., Before the Houde rose Bt 10 am., the, ~ 

subsidies had all been put through, ‘There 
| was & protracted discussion on a subsidy 

to wtine from 0 Bound 

twenty-one miles, the Opposition “taking 

the ground that as no ‘company at pres. 

ent holds a charter covering this route 
that the ¥ote was merely to be utilized 
by the Minister of Customs as a means 


Bill Iuteodyeing the. Ticks t-of) of renewing nis yote of -confdence: trom 


Leave Manto Canada 
Acopted., 
a 


Ottawp/ Aug 
of theTlouse of Commons the Senate am-| 
endments to the Grand Trunk and Drum- 
nmiond County Railway bills respecting the 
extensidn of the Intercolonial railway to 
Montreal were concurred in. 


There was considerable discussion upon | 
bill to intro- | 


the committee stage of the 
duce the ticket-of-leave system in our 
Canadian penitentiaries, The matter had 
been under discussion on Saturday when 
Mr, Foster took the view that discretion 
under the act-coutd be-more safety and 
vested in tha Minister of Justice 
in the Governor-in-Council. The 
Minister had with the 
who himself of 
a@ like He proposed a change in 
the bill accordingly that the Minister of 
should advise the Governor-Gen- 
the tssye OF these tckets-or- 
This war the Syttem tir Vorud 
American slates. . 
that although the 
restrict the power to 
be understanding that 
it should-net apply to convicts under sen- 
for murder 

My. Davin his 
the legisiation as long as the Department 
of Justice was presided over by the Hon. 
Milin— -He-was of the -impression 
the pardoning clauses in the Crim- 
‘ode would leave ample power to the 
tities to Geal With criminals” who 
[mes been harsly treated by the courts, 
Mr-- 3.3. Quinn expressed hla: ¢on~ 
a in. the Hil.. He considered 
nnd Calculated is Rive 
a Opportunity to escape 
becoming hardened In crime 

M_ Poster acknowledged that his 
eotiuns had been targely met “by 
Premier's amendment, but advised 
gov to lay it ti 
sion. te the views.of the 
Bar. 


The Premier 


than 
Prime consulted 
was 


opinion, 


eral as 
leave 


The 


feasure 


Premier replied 


did 


not 


tence 


expressed opposition to 


that 
inal ¢ 


from 


pb- 
the 
the 

next ses- 
Bench and 


mment over 


take 


Minister 


subject 


returned that the 
already Kiven the 
very full consideratian 

The then passed ita third read 
ing 
Sex 
dumping 
able waters were 


had 


Measure 
bil). against 
in and - navig- 
concurred in 


amendments to .the 
ballast 


sate 
harbors 


sais Rallway Act.Amemimenta 
The 
thea called 


bill to amend the raliway 
Mr. Foster, who was leading 
understood that this item 
waa to been dropped 
the raf}- 
way committee upon the determined  op- 
position of Sir Charlies Tupper. the 
tions giving the Governor-in-Councll pow- 
compel railway com- 
panies to build at given points 
and to form the uniform running rules for 
dian lines had The 
clauses’ we parliament 

ep. 


act was 


have 
that 


of legislation 


Mr, Blair replied before 


Beo- 


or ow subsidized 


Stations 
been dropped 
uch 


z in 


re 6 as 


had ¢t ns 
war 


att 


en inc ratir railway bi! 

e inverted in the gen 
clauses that had been 
luect dropped w so dealt with 
beca » of the threat Charles to 
bloc gation 


Mr 
th 


and 


eral The re- 


Sir 


that 
com- 
protested 
from. the 


w 


two 


rinted 
the 

and 

kind 


(Hamilton) ¢ out 
e proyisi 
mendable the 
against dictation of 
leader of the Opposition 
Sir Wilfrid Laurier, however, took the 
position that there was no. alternative but 
to follow the rstanding with Bir 
Charles, 
Mr, McLean 


declared that 


ma were 
bi 
this 


me 


out und 
(Conservative, E York) 
he was not golng to 
by any euch understanding and 
an amendment replacing the 
side-tracking of trains 

The Premier was in favor of the 
endment, but could not advise the House 
to go back.on the understanding reached 
with Sir Charles Tupper. 

Mr. Bostock intimated that 
the town of ir 
which he had been 
through the proposed Jegisiation 
ready heen aettled by the C.P.R., 
had agreed to build a station there 
der the circumstances related by the 
mier he would therefore. respect the 
derstanding 

.M Clark Wallace 
would support the amendment proposed 
by Mr, MeLean. He charged the govern- 
mtnt with being afraid to legislate on 
this point 


ast 
be 
bound 
moved 


lause to prevent 


am- 


British ¢ 


of 
columbia 

cover 
had al- 


case 


anxious to 


Pre- 
un- 


announced 


&—At yesterday's sitting was a company 


it. 
juvenile , 


the “étecteral.’’ The government ~ dented 
this statement of the case and gtated 
that the same thing had been done us- 
der the late government and that in two 
eases the Governor-in-Council had taken 
part to incorporate companies,. There 
chartered (» bulld this 
| Ine, but thelr rights had lapsed and this 

charter might induce them to cali for a 
| renewal, , 

IN THE SENATE.” 
In the Senate yesterday the “Hon. “R- 
| W. Scott introduced 4 bill to amend the 
; General Inspection Act, which was read 

a first me. 

On the motion to adjourn, Sir Macken- 

} #le Bowell called attention to. a cable- 
gram which had appeared in the English 
newspapers to the effect that the Benate 

| had. thrown out the Redistribgtion ‘bill on 
the ground that it was eitsbetitutianiel: 
legal opinions against that 
view, “It was nc he pointed out, on 

}this ground that the bill had been re- 

Jected, but on the grounds set forth In 

his amendment,- He referred to the cable=- 
j gram which had mm the Eng 
“tteh-rewspapers senre tine age in regard 

to the Yukon charges, con@ining mis- 
statements of fact, which, it appeared, 

Reuters agent had been instructed to 

send from Ottawa, He would like to 
‘know if Cf® legal opinion expressed con- 

trary to the that the redistribution 
bill was unconstitutional evidenve 
that this misleading cablegram had 
been. sent under instructions. 

The Hon, David Mills said that he nad 
not had any correspondence with any one 
in England on this subject. It looked to 

' bim as Lf the cabiesram. was the result of 
newspaper enterprise. 

Sif Maekensle Howell then brought- up 
the question of the interview. credited to 
} Mr. Pitepatrick, an official of the United 

States | Treasury Department, in dis- 

patches from Washington regarding thé 

refusal of the Premier to accept or advise 
the Governor-General to uccept an tnvi- 
tation to attead the ceremony of laying 
the corer. stone of the eivie bulld= 

ing in Chisago next Octobet,. It was im- 

pertant..that the truth.should be..kaown. 

about this matter, as it was possible that 

1. might result in inernational trouble. He 
would Hike to know. If such an interview 
had ever taken and, if so, whether 
the Premier had given expression to the 
sentiments credited to him. It 
to him that*the Whole matter was ont of 
keeping with the dignity of the peritiok 
of Premier of ¢ He would like 
to know if the report was true that the 
friendly relations which had hitherto “ex- 
listed with the States had been 
broken off, 

The. Hon Mille said 
the interview as published 
patches from Washington !t 
pear that it was a-case of pistols for two 
and coffee. for onc. 

Sir Mackenzle’ Bowell did not under- 
stand. if it. was simply a question of 
coffee and pistols between this gentleman 
and the first minister it would not matter 
much It was, however, serious 
matter. If the facts given in the dispatch 
were correct ft was most undignified and 
injudigious, It appeared, however, so im- 
probatle that he would not belleve it. 

The- Hon. Deavid,Mills said it was to be 
deprecated’ that they ahould discuss ali 
gorts of newspaper reports in parliament 
and give to thetii Importance which they 
did not deserve, For some days the 

' sition of the Alaska boundary dispute had 
been -utterly, misrepresented He ‘knew 
nothing about the facts as stated In this 
dispatch, and had not considered the mat- 
ter’ of sufficient importance to ask the 

Premier about them. It seemed-to him 

that some ~a-liner-had written the 

interview 

Sir Mackenzie Powell sald that tt was 
no penny-a-liner, ,but oficial of the 
Treasury Department At Washington who 
hud given the interview. The utterances 

@ot the Pretiler of Canada in a matter of 


and quoting 


appeared 


View 
was 
also 


new 


place 


seemed 


anada 


United 


from 
dis- 
ap- 


that 
in the 
would 


David 


& more 


Ror 


penny 


an 


which | 
Un-) 


| 


that he} 


iP. 


tay ctl BM SOB AU QUEL Mtb K SEY, SUMMER 


thing that Sir Charles Tuppers own sup- | 


port=rs-shoutd-be-objecting-to-keep faith — 


| with him 


says that he, 


the | 


Mr. Hagegart thought the 
was trying to shoulder on the 
responsiblity fer rejecting legislation 
aid not want to go on with. 


government 
Opposition 
it 


Mr. Blair promised that the gov ernment | 
bring in another bill | 
to make the proposed changes in the ex-| 


would next session 


isting law. 

Messrs. Richardson, Oliver, Mills, Me- 
Mullen and Henderson, who alt support- 
ed the principle of the amendment, were 
still loath to break faith with’ tle leader 
of. the Opposition. 

The amendment was declared lost, with- 
Ott Hviston andthe itt prased 
veading. 

The bil to authorize the building of a 
branch line from Charlottetown to -Mur- 
ray Harbor pawsed the third reading. 


Raliway Subsidies. 


The order for the second reading of 
the Rallways Subsidies bill followed and 
brought on another prolonged discussion 
on this topic similar in many respects 
to that which had already taken place 
upon the resolutions. 

Mr. Richardson renewed his appeal to 
the Minister of Railways to insert a pro- 
vision in the bill to prevent railway com- 
panies from keeping up rates by calculat- 
ing their profits on the capltal invested 


end on government subsidies as well. 


The Minister of Railways gave a pro-|' 
Mise to consider the advisability of intro- 
ducing such legislation later. He thought 


Wary 6f the North-American - Indians 
| were magnificent specimens of ‘physical 

manhood. This was duc, largély; to their 

active out-door life, Nevertheless, they 
| bad the wisdom to know that an active life 
in the open air alone, would not keep a 
map healthy. They had their medicine. 
men, who gathered herbs from field and 
forest and brewed decoctions to assist the 
natural processes of the various vital 
organs. 

Modern civilized men do not as a usval 
thing recognize tlie sathe necessity until it 
fs too late. They ignore medicine. until 
they are within the grasp of some serious 

or fatal disease. . ‘The tine fora man to be- 

wa taking medicine is when. he begins to 


Cg rk Era ie th 


this kind were important, and if this was 


a “fake” tt should be watfed at the aoor | 


= the man who over his own name had 
vouched. for its- accuracy, f 


ARSE FROME KLOONE, 


Miss joe Scott, of the Victoria Order, Gives 1 


aa latercsting Description of 
Life at Caw on. 


fi > 
Mrs. Amy Soot, one of the Vietorian 
Order of Nurses, who went to Dawan 
last year, isin Vancouver, and to-a World 


representative gave an interestijg “des 


eription of hospital life in the worth, A 
special presentation wan made to Mins 
Scott last Christmas, in recognition of 
her services in the barracks dospital, Lt 
consisted of 4 very handsome and unique 
gold locket, composed of nuggets, the 
bases of which have been melted so as 
to make olid: parts, while the fates of 
the jewel_areinthe original form of the 
nuggets, .'The whole piece is very beau- 
thully formed and the design daintily 


-executed, - Bngraved—on the —inside—are 


the words, “To Miss 
patients of the Northwest Mounted Po 
lice, in grateful remembrance of her 
kindness and care ! 
“How did yon like hospital life there?" ; 
asked the interviewer: t 
“Well, it was much the same as any- 
where else, The Mounted Police surgeon 
was:in charge and the arrargements 
were carried ‘out just as completely as 
in any hospital. I could hardly tell_you 
of any strong difference between the 
features of the work there and in To- 
route. - The Mounted Police make splen 
did patients, ae they are “very fine en 
in every. other way, year _we-hed 
a regular 7 
Epidemic 


but of all the 
enty-one died: 
there this year, 

The other nurses 
ing their holidays 
work to be 

tan hospital there 


Seott, from her} 


Last 


of Typhoid, 


patiehts that' we treated 
No, there ism epidemic 
at st when I left 
were practically: tak 
as there wis scarce! 
ne, In the nari 
were only 14 patients 
when I left, whilst last year there were 
40 or S)-ip at a time, Miss Powell is 
now attending to the operation—of the 
Victorian: Order's cabin, which was built} 
jest-telt---Phe-whole— butting nay ott 
be larger than this room, but it ig a! 
very comfortable little place. -We have 
very convenient a¥rangementse at the 
hospital. Of if you were in a 
Vancouver bospital and. wanted water 
you would turn on the tap, In Dawson 
you ask a policeman’ to carry a pail for 
you. It all’ amount the same thing 
the end, and I assure you that our 
way-up there is quite as satisfactory as 
it is down here. I was taken ill in 
Norember_ aud wht sick for a couple gf 
months, but by thatetime nearly all the * 
patients had been dischatged -The on- 
ly in during the winter -were -« 
few scurvy patients atid: cases of freez- 
ing I 
©, I did not finil the winter 
enough thefe, to be inconvenient,” con- 
tinued Khiee. Soott,$p-anuswer to the-wea- 
ther question. “I rather thought -the 
winter better than it would be in Toron 
to. The alr is so dry and there is gel 
dom a breath of air stirring. No wo- 
man ever gets fre zen in Dawson, and it 
is only when the’miners are rather eare- 
less that they are bitten A man is 
carrying a pack in from some of the 
creeks when it falls off, and in fiddling 
around fixing it- again with his gloves 
off, his fingers and perhaps bis whole 
hands are affected, But these ate about 
th only Gasea,. We would never think 
of staying in for 24, hours just because 
the weather was cold. I have seen Mrs. 
Starnes frequently go out for a couple 
of hours when the thermometer at 
There would be not a breath 
with everything. still 
as possible, She would be 


any 


course, 


to 


in 


ours 


cold 


was 
below 
of air stirring 
and qniet 
dressed 


as 


In Ordinary Winter Clothilr 
after going 100 yards 
ff ber gauntiets, and for 
two hours her hdnds would 
covered by ordinary . gloves. 
splendid w sin winter, The 
good highway right along 
for 00-miles if. you like to come up 
that far. Oh, oo, the- weather nu 
incontenience, except thatit- is very hot 
in summer: br winter; the-days-ate-fit- 
tle more noticeably. short than in 
érn ( while in the summer photo- 
graphing at midnight and reading your 
nevel on your baleony at 1 o'clock in 
the inorning is a favorite amusement of 
the population. Then the are. no 
mosquitoes in Dawson in summer; one 
has to go out on the trail to find them. 
“All needs to live: a cotafortable 
life in Dawson ss 


Ie Plenty 


and probably 
would take 
rest of the 
be = only 

There 
Yukon 


is 


east 


una 


one 


of Money. 


There are luxuries of every kind to be 
had—the city is full of provisions of 
every. sort, as well as of pupchasable ar 
ticles of all and the only thing 
lacking is the searcity of recreation agd- 
amusement.” There is not much to do 
with one’s spare hours. We had a 


~ Christmas dinner Ivst year just the same 


in every particular ast would be io 
$33, which was—#ightly more—than it 
Would” Hit” here “It” wees to ne tintt- 
the supplies in ‘Dawson will last for! 
rears, and for the-last couple of sea- 
sons there have been large iibportations 
of ladies’ dresk goods, milinery, ete. Life |} 
on the whole is very humdrum in Daw- 
son. It is a mistake-fe suppose that} 
there is little even out of the ordinary. 
One dresses just the same and fives in 
preciély the same way as one does in 
Vancouver. ' 
country has been exaggerated “to sce 
wonders there.the first day, and the ex- 
aggerated -accounts that are obtained 
from there are written_and told with a 
sort of intention of keeping -up the re- 


eel-out of sorts. Ifa man is ring 


Tf he does feel that way he may be pretty 
sure that he is half sick. When he is half. 
sick it does not take long before he is 
‘“whole-sick."” Dr, Pierce's Golden Med- 
eal Discovery is 1) 
man when he is k or getting sick. 
puts bim ai} right all round. It puts his 
stomach right to begin with, and that is the 
most os hey point. It puts his liver 
tight, and that is the second most es ed 
ant_point:—It purifies his blood, and fills it~‘ 
with the life-giving elements of ‘the food | 
he eats, and that is the third important 
peist. It dgjres out all disease germs and 
mpurities of every discription. TE makes 
the appetite keen and hearty. It is the 
a blood-maker and flesh-huilder, It 
cures Aa cent. of all cases o ae 
tiony weak lungs, spitting of blood, obsti- 
nate coughs and kinited ailments. Thou- 
sands who were given up to die have testi- 
fied to their-recovery under this marvelous 
medicine. An honest dealer will not arge 
a substitute for the sake of a little: extra 
profit. He gives you what you ask for. 


iharkable reputation of the istrict 
pnusual is fast dying out and the or- 
 dinary taking ite place, 

“There are ® great many 


More Women in Dawson 


than most’ people out here imagine. I 
should think there would. be at least 
5,000, but it is not a place where one 
easily gets” aequaiated. ~~ Many -wonen 
go out ‘on the creéks- with their hus- 
bands, and then all are usually pretty 
“busy; On the-beat eoming out was the, 
wife of a prominent merchant in ‘Daw- 
son, and she had been living there over 
a year. I bad never even seen her, and 
taking all things into consideration I 
do not wonder at many instances of this 
kind,- Many of the women there take a 
good deal of interest in church work. 
The Charch of England and the most 


of the other branches are as yet small, 


‘np Into the creeks. 


"| perience 


It seomp to me that the | 


wih the Cutholic the largest 
building’ In the city. Its walla outside 
are bullt of logs, but-it, is larger than 
the-present’ church ti -Vancopver, Tn- 
ee it if Handsomely finished in_pative 
} wool. The alter carving is a fine’ pivce 


ot wirhoidielip.” There” ate six’ very.” 


| Limdisome paintings, gifts to: the church. 
“King” dtex,’ MeDinald opened. the subs 
seription list with $45,000 opposite hig’ 
name, ¥o that you can easily sée tlat a 
| arg ainount of ier has” Been spent 
on it. 

"Oh, 
There (# quite a 
large town at the forks of Bananza and 
Bikdorsdy and. that district is exactly in 
the contre of ~g flourishing see- 
than. -We_ we up to. Berry's elaim 
among: otheve, js about the best 
on Eldorado,’ We went. down in it, and 
you could simply throw out the nuggets 
by the spoonful. But then you ‘get sick 
of looking at.nuggets in Dawson, for 
everyoue bas them Inthe shape of. pins 
or some aimilar ornament or entirely un- 
mounted, I expect after a year of two 
in the east | will-like to see some nug- 
gets again.” 


Praixe For Steele, | 


Mins Scott is very warm in ber praise 
af the good work done individually by 
the Mounted Police as well as of the 
success of their administrative affairs. 
Colonel Steele, at the head‘ of the Yu- 
kon” forces, if ote of the most popular 
men in Dawson, and he never spares an 
effort to bring satisfaction to the miners 
who bave. business .to transact with 
him. Office hours With hint are, 
from the point of anything like a strict 
rule, a long-vanished — possibility. No 
matter what hour of the day or night 
it is, 2 miner, who has very often walk 
Gli OY OF 40 filles, just for the special | 
purpose of seclog him, can claim his ate" 
tention without apy time, The oth: | 
er officers and’ men form a splendid de 
tachment of what Miss Scott-thinks 
the finest organized body of men ju the, 
world, nt Jeast so-far as her wide ex- 
has reached. 


MORE HORRORS TOLD, 


Eighteen Prospecters Return to Edmoaton - 
Lives That Were Lost Aloag 
the Trett, 


| 


ar- 


prospectors | 
Ltara | 


from the 


returnwg 
Torsday 


Kightecn 
rivel in town on 
and Mackenzie mvers, the » 
of -over’s 
low when 


says 


Ht. 

Edme 

The Wrigley 
Jane 20th for Great Slave with 
60 Klondikers on board, . The majority 
were from Simpson and Norman, and 
the remainder from the Liard and Gra- 
vel rivers, where they have been wher 
tering. On -arriving-at-Sinve | 
passengers disembarked and the Wrig- 
ley returned down the Mackenzie to Peel 
river to bring up all those who wintered 
im that vicinity and who' desired to re- 
tern: Of hero piteengers left 
lake eighteen continned) to 
with four canoes and the balance 
over to visit the claims staked dn 
north: shoreof the lake, 
come up with the other passengers when 
the Wrigley returns from Teel, 

Of these who came up on the, Wri gles y, 
three came from Black Mad river, on 
the apper Liard. 110 miles from 
Dease, whete they had wintered. Their 
names are Wm. G. Smith, of 
Man.; John Grant, of Toronto; ana 
Frank Bastion, of St. Afbert. About 110 
men wintered above them, on the Brule 
portage, _ continu on throngh 
spring About iInen died 
Tiard river through scurvy and 
An old roe 
scurvy unknown 
ed iver 4 
man, 


body 
frozen to 

ber of men tried 
successfal A W 
drowned at Cranberry f 
sawed Turney. died-of scurvey, 
may died Fort Halkett 
both feet frogen, nex tatix 
tion, and did net survive the operation.: 
“Old Pete,” a Swede, who, it is claim- 
ai, formeriy mined the river .bere, 
Ww aceidéntally shot dead ly U'Ciaey 
pelle, of St.- Albert; who came out owith 
Kluetch, Pete was sitting in his cabin, 
with a number of others, when L’Chap- 
pelle picked up o revolver. .The weapon 


B. Oo.’4 boats come 
ton Bulletia of the 


the 
the 


went 


ten on 
accident 
mean Grieves 


An 
ad r 


man was drown 
wither, a 


of 


in 
a 1 wit ed scurvy A 
came 
a num- 
they un 
man . was 
A ‘man 
An old 
He had 
ig amputa- 


«l though 
were 
isconsin 


apids 


near 


was a hammerleas one, and was accident- | 


ally 
on the 
denth, 


ballet_striking Pete 
sidé of the head, caveing instant 
Among the parties wintering on 
the upper Liard were: A. D.' Osborne, 
| John Russell and J. Kenecley, Eimon- 
} ton; Ross and Rosewell, Sudbury, Ont.; 
| W. Drain, Prince Albert and Falken- 
berg. Who spent the winter’ before last 
at Grand Rapils’ Near the month 
| the Nelson Clatworthy anf tiyo compan- 
ions wintered.: He was endeavoring to 
pitsh the Liard. Maloney, his 
former partner, had frozen his feet, and 
ia ot Great Slavé on his’ way back. 
Grant; - Bastion snd Smith — lefe-thetr 


discharged, the 


on up 


Thay Ie winter aa ir dn anasy on vtheinnwayy: 


back te Eimonton, pulling their ontéit 
-on._tohoggans to Snretown, _ below 

Yevil's portage. 

Among the eighteen who reached town 
| are: Carmichael, Sudburs, Ont.; sed- 
| des, Ont.; Ritchie and son, Poplar Point, 
Man:: J. Roe, Rapid City, Man.; RK, 
Hunter, Hamilton: Joseph and tins 
|. Schusler, Chicage Schmidt,, New 
| York: McClentic,- Winchester, “Ne H.: 
| Wim. G. Smith, Scikirk; Smith ‘and Hed- 
ley, Mam: John Stetson, Princetown, 
Til.; and—Weod,._Dela ware. ke 
Tt is expected that the Wrigley ‘will 
be back at Resolution from ber trip te 
the Peel about the 20th inst, 


church’ 


yon. we took. several excursions 


beautiful tsiands Tr the 


dvance guard | 
Hundred others: who wilt fol | 


left Simpson on | 
about ; 


Lake the | 


as the? 
the landing | 


the | 
They will | 


the | 


Selkirk, | 


this | 
the | 


, 
died* from | 
youvg 


ard this spring, | 


of) 


the | 


“LL 


ve durable, fire f satis- 
fection make old buildings look 
like new at sinall. cost—and are 
invaluable for use in all new up-to- 
date structures. ; 

We make Metal Fronts tosuitany 
building ‘are-easily applied 
and give enduring rw ig 
oe pad on A fooeipt 

outline ny; pe and mea- 
surements of S bullding: 

Better read_our catalogue—it' S 
full of interesting building isifor- 
ination, Shall we send you one? 


A. B, FRASER, SK., 
SELLING AGENT. VICTORIA, 


Mayne Island, B.C. 


| away between Vanconvrer and-¥ietorta) 
| 


* 
This hotel is situated on one of the most 
Gulf of Georgia. 
~@Olimate delightful; good boating and fish- 
. lawn tenuis and bathing, 
the place to oo -@ holiday during 


| the hot summer mont 
ij 
} nilerh Conveniences, 


‘The house ts well faratabes and with all 


The. steamer leay Vietoria every Wed- 


nesday and Friday at 7 « 


Moderate rates. 


‘ATLIN MINES. 


Reliable information can be 
bad by applying to 


-RANT & JONES, 


jokers} ATLIN, B.C. 
See 


Stoddart’s Jewelry 


68 YATES STREET; 


Stoddart’s Watches 


Prices lower thas ever. 


Stamps. : 


XN. B.—We Give Trading 


EYES TEST 
Pree. 


ANDREW SHERET, 


mens, Plumber 


Cas, Steam and 
Met Waser Fitsor 


Cor. Blanchard ”* 
Talaghene $0. 


Charles! Ho yward. 


Funeral Director and Embalmer 
Government street, Victoria. 


JOHN MESTON 


Carriage Maker, 
Blacksmith, 
Etc. 


_ Broao_ Sr., BeTween Panvora 
AND JOHNSON, 


—_—______ ARE_YoOU.BiLtous2 


—-— 

A_sloggish Iver fatis to filter the bile 
from the blood, and when the po'sonous 
matter goes through the body In the dires- 
lation, the whole system i tainted and 
deranged. This Is called billousness and 
can be completely cured by, Dr. 4. W. 
Chase's Kidney-Iiver Pills, whteh wet dl- 
rectly on the lver, making It healthy aad 
active, One pill a dose, 25 cents a box. 
Tie cheapest. medicine im the world, ‘ 


The ..Rev. .W._B.. Costloy...of Stockbridge, 
Ga., while attending to his pastoral duties 
at Ellenwood, that state, was -atnicked by 
cholera morbis. He says: “By chance I 
happened to get hold of a bottle of Cham. 
bertain’s Colle; Cholera. and Diarrhoca 
Remedy, and 1 think it wae the megna-of 
saviog my Ife. It relieved me at“onee,” 
Yor sale by Henderson Tros.. Wholesale 
Agents, Victoria and Vancouver, ~ . 


FOR SALE ss%s2."ssci"s 


slashed; qo fruit 
acres 13 tig yore) 


+ SWINERTON 8 ODDY,_- 
. ¥06 Government Street 
000000s Coes Koeccnesenee 
eee 


For Sal--Poin Bl Tone 


yan, iin 2 Mg td 


site, no Bo" 
close to the hee hea a. Only bon 


a8 ot the atin 


as oie ae 


*. 


29 ee Samy te ad 


——eormnprivet -in—the—emtmerntion— 


SEMANA TAT TALUS NTA NO 


aopecateNS POD AAD 


, 


WRT NPAL ERE IRRO MZ 


Y STRUM Nata ie 


“¥ 


f 


5 


ETRE OER NIL OS ORS LTP 


SPIRE TORE FT TT APRPMES NSS RODS AROS TREC ATURE CIA TI 


VICTORIA DAILY TieEs, MONDAY, TUever 14, 1899 


|e 


| Ghinese i | Seen 


foal Mines = 


whe Privy { Council Decision--Pro- | 
vincial Legislation Declared 
Ultra Vires 


‘Their Lordships Confined Them- 
selves to This Phase of 
the Matter. 


Following ie the full text Of the im 
portent judgment remleretl, by the judi- 
cial committee of the Privy Couneil in 
the appeal of the defetidants im -the 
friendly suit of Bryden vs. Union Col- 
ery Company: 

This was an appeal from.an_order of 
the Supreme Court of Britich Columbia 
of July 13, 1808, affirming a decision of 
Mr. Justice Drake. , 

‘The Hon. Edward Blake, Q. C,, avd 
Mr. Cassidy (both of tie Canadian Bar) 
appeared for the applellumis, Mr, Taylor, 
Q. OC, (of the Canadian Bar), for the 
respondent; Mr. Haldane, Q. oO, and 
Mr, Charles A, Russell, Q. C., for the 
Attorney-General of British Colombia, 
“The arguments were recently beard 
before a board composed of Lord Wat 
aon, Lord Hobhoase, Lord Macnaghten, 
Sic Richard Couch apd Sir Kdward 

ye, when judguicnt was reserved. 

Lord Walton, in delve ther Lord- 
ships’ judguent, said that tué appellant 
‘company curredat-(he Kusiuess of Tue 
ing coal by means of waoderground mines 
in British Colwiivia, and had employed, 
and sull continue to employ, Chinameb 
ja ie Workitg af thelr wus by 
4,- of <the Coal Mine “Megulation Act 
1800, it is expressely enacted that "No 
boy under-the age of lL’ years and 
Woman or girl of any age, and oo China 
man shall be ewpliyed ii dr allowed to 
befor the purpose of __eumployiient: ™m 
any-mine to which the Act applies be 
low grotad.” ‘Whe presewt action was in 
stiguted by the respondent, Mr. Bryden, 
whois wSturcholder in the company, 
He asked (1) fer a declaration that the 
the-cotmpasy dued ae  richt to wuploy 
Chinamen in cextain positions of trast 
ald responsibility or as lborers in their 
filies below ground, wna that such em- 
ployment was unlawful; and (2) for an 
injunction restraining the compazy from 
so employing Chinamen and from using 
their-funds in-paying - the wages of 
Chiiitien. “The espoutient averted that 
the employjent of Chinamen was & 
source of danger and imjury to other 
persons Working in the mines, which in- 
yolved the liability of the company for 
damages, and was also injurious and dt 
structive to the mines. He also pleaded 
that the employment of Chinamen 


* 


no 


gp thous.oapeckive was contrary. to the sli 


Thre appel- 


Was any 


tute law of the province. 
lant company denied that there 
risk of: injury arising cither other 
‘workmen in their mines or to the mines 
from the employment of _Chinamen' 
underground miners, They pleaded that, 
in so far as they related to adult China 
men, the enactm s of section 4, of the 
Coal Mines Regilation Act were roid as 
bei ng Uirs vires of the ligislature of ~ 
“e of British Columbia. ‘The 

yeneral of the province of ait 

ish Columbia had, in the character of 
intervemant, become a party to the lit 
ogation. The controversy had been limit 
ed to the single question whether the en- 
actments under section 4 were within the 
competency of the British Columbia 
legiglatnre, That question lirectly con 
corned the legi ive authority of the ke- 
gislature of Britikh Columbia, which qe 
pended upon the constructions of  sec- 
tions 91 and 92 of the British North 
Amertien Act) 4867.) ‘These clauses slis 
tributed alt eubjects of ‘legislation bé 
tween the parliament of the Dominion 
and the several legislatures of the ‘pro 
vinces; Tu sdsigning lkegielative power 
to ane or other of those parliaments, it 
was not made a statutory condition that 
the exercise of sich’ power should he, 
in ‘the opinion of a court of law, ‘dis 
ere In #0 far as they possessed lecie 
lative jurisdiction, the 
, mitted to the parkiameuts, 
the Dominion or of the 
unfettered. It wax the 
of a court of law to determine what 
were the limit of the jurisdiction com 
mitted to them; brt.when that fioint had 
hoon acdttled, courts of law had no right 
whatever to inquire whether their puris- 
@iction had been exercised wisely or not 
There could be no doubt that if section 
92. of the Act of 1867 had stood 
and had not been qualified by the pro- 
visions ‘of the clause which preceded, 
the provincial legislature of British Co 
Aambia-werld-have-had--ample jurisdic 
tion to enact section 4 of the Con] Mines 
Regulation Act. .The, subject-matter of 
that enactment wonld clearly have been 
fneluded in wectipn $2 (1M, which ox 
“tended to -provincint undertakings, —snetr 
as the conl mines of the appellant com- 
pany. It would have also heen ineloded 
in section 92 130, which embraces “pro- 
porty_and civil rights in — the province.” 
But seetion 91 (25), extended the exclu 
sive legislative authority of the partia- 
ment of Canada to “naturalization and 
aliens.” and that section conclodel with 
a proviso to the effect that “any: matter 
coming within any of the. classes\of 
subjects enumerated in this section shalt 
not be deemed to come within the class 
of matters of a local or private nature 
“ofthe 
Act assigned 


as 


liseretion com 
of 


was 


whether 
provinces, 
proper function 


nione, 


Classes of aubjects by this 


—exelusively to the Jegialaturos of the pro— 


vinces.” 
prohibited 
of full ace, 


Section 4 of the provincial act 
Chinamen who were 

from emplayment tn 
umierground coal workings Kivery 
ftiew when naturalized in Onnada 
hecame ipso facto a Canadian anbject of 
the Queen, and his children were not 
aliens requiring to -be naturalised, 
were -natnral-born- Canadians 
hardly have been 
“Dominion partinment the exchreive right 
“Fo Tozialate fae the Tgtter Cee wr Perna 
resident in Cnunada, but section 91 (25 


») 
might possitily be construed as confer- 


It could 


ring that power in the ease of naturalts- | 
The sub-! 
prima | 


ed aliens after naturalization, 
fect of “natureliaetion” seemed 
ferle to Inclnde the power of enacting 


what should be the consequences, of na-} 


tvralization, or, In other words, what 
should be the rights and privileges per- 
taining to residents in Canoda after ther 
had been naturalized. It seemed clear 


erchon— 


but | 


intended to give the! 


| that. the expression “aliens” in hat: soc. 
tion referred to and at least included all 
| aliens who had not yet been naturalized, 
and the: words; “no Chinamen” in the 
{ Provincial Act. certaiily: inchaded “every | 
Sadr 4 ~binama: who had‘ not 
urelized.-. Mr. Taailes: Dicake, WLS tried}: 
ihe case, and the Full Court, on appeal, 
| were of opinion that the enactments of 
section 4 of the Coal Mines,-Act, were 
within the legislative authority of the 
Provincial parliament, and they decreed 
that the einploy ment of Chinamen ifi the 
company’s mines was unlawfal, and they 
granted an injunction restraining 


company. from, employing . them, .'Phe 


proviaiins of which tho ¥alidity had ‘been | 
thus affirmed by the courts below were) 


| capable of being viewed in two different 
| aspects, according to one of which they 
| appeared to fall within the subjects a 
signed to the Provincial parliament by 
section 92 of the British North America 
Act, 
they cleatly belonged to the cluss of sub- 
jects exclusively assigned to the Legis- 
luture of the Dominion by section 91 
425), They might be regarded as merely | 


‘establishing a regulation applicable tothe +” Reynotas 


rround coal mines, and, 
exhaustive description 
of the substance of the enactments, it 
would be diffienlt to dispute. that they 
were within the competency of the Pro- 
vincial Legislature by virtue either 

section #2 (10) or. section 92 (13) But 
the tending feature of the enactm 
consisted in this—that they had, 
could have, no application, exeept to 
Chinamen, who were: aliens or natural- 
ized subjects, and that they established 
‘no rule or regulation,except that those 


working of unde 
if that were an 


{ 
the 


1867, whilst, according to the othe vr, | 


” va} 


of W. Templeton.. ‘gra ome... 


aliens of noturalized subjects shpuld not- 


in 
Province 


to work, 
Within the 


work, or be allowed 
ground coal mines 
of. British Columbia..." Their 
saw no reasen-to doubt that, by 
section 01 (25),, the Legislature 
Dominion. was invested with 
' authority 
concerned the 


virtue ef 
of the 


rights, privileges and dis 
abilities. of the class of Chinamena _ who 
Were. tesident in the Provinces of Can 
ada, ‘They. were also of opinion that the 
whole pith and substance of the enact 
ments..of section 4. of- the Coal..Mines 
Regulation: Act, so far as objected to 
by the appellant company, -consisted 
establishing a statutory pri 
affected aliens or naturalized” subject 
and therefore trenched -upon- the excl 
sive authority of the parliament’ of Can- 
alate 
the Fut? Court notieed the et that 
the Dominion Lexistature had passed a 
“Netaretieation Act; Noo-tis of the Re 
vised Statutes of Canada, 1886," by 
which i parti control was exercised 
the figtit® of aliens, Mr: Justice 
Walkem appeared to regard that fact 
as favorable to the right of the Provin- 
clal parliament to legislate for the ex- 
clusion ef aliens, being Chinamen, from 
widergronndt tout mines “The —“kbstin= 
of the 
lating’ to the full limit-of its powers 
could not have the effect of transferring 
to Provineial Legislature the legis- 
lative power which ‘had been assigned ‘to 
the Dominion by section 91 of the Aet of 
186. Their Lordships. would therefore 
humbly. adsvise..dier..Majesty 
the judgnrent appealed from, to find and 
declare that the provisions of section 4 
of the British Colombia Coil’ Mines 
Regulation Act, 1800, were, In so far as 
they related to Chinamen, ultra vires of 
the. Provincial Legislature, ‘and there 
fore illegal, and to order that the plain 
tiffs do pay to the company the ‘costs in 
eurred hy them in both courts below, 
the same should be taxed. The respon- 
dents,-other than the: intervenant; must 
pay to the company their costs of this 
appeal 


OVEF 


any 


MORE EXCURSIONTSTS, 


i 
ada From Interior Towns 
the 10th. 

——— 
Each day's mail brings new 
that the y r&pnion here on 
day next will be a monster event Ab 
letter was received here this morning 
from Pbil. R. Smith, the secretary, from 
a-member.of the Seattle local commit- 
tee, which indicates ao large auguarenta- 
tign of the excursion party 
points: His eorrespendent 
rate cannot be arranged on the 
Pacific from. Roslyn to Seattle, 


Seven Car Los 
on 


assurance 


BOC Satur 


asks If 9 iow 
Northern 
He 


promises in the event of euch a rate be- } Nanaimo, 


car loads of 
advantage of the 
Sannd cities, 

affair is becom- 


ing arraigned that seven 
excursionists well take 
trip, together with the 

The magnitude of the 


ing so evident that the. local committve | 


for additional’ means 
of entertainment for the visitors, To 
this end they are endeavoring to arrange 
for the match which was to have 
place New Westminster 
Nelson lacrosse clubs at New Westmin 
ster next Saturday to be pulled off here. 
They have offe the respective 
the free use of the grounds for the 
noon, Such a match, while interestiag 
to all the visitors, would be particularly 

+ iMtractive to American excursioniats, 
whose opporibities of witnessing Can- 
car's WaTiONN gum are tmtted. 


Doan’s KIDNEY 
PILts 


Driving all Forms of Kidney Disease, 
Backache and Urinary Troubles 
from the County of Mid- 
dlesex, Ontario. 


One after another the aufferéts from the 
various forme of kidney disease are teatify- 
ing to being cured by Doan's Kidney Pills, 
No remedy has ever taken such a bold on 
the poople of the city of London aod sur- 
rounding country. 

_ It's not difficult to see the reason: Doan's 


are looking About 


between 


under- | 


Lordships ed the greens in team—piey, 


exclusive ‘ 
in_all matters which direetly matches 


r ‘n Allen and Barr, were 
bifion which jdcrnsse, 


The faders who delivered opinions” 


Dominion parliament frem + 


to reverse: 


from interior 


taken | 
and | 


clubs | 
fore-| 


42k 


‘ } 
VANCOUVER DEFBATS NELSON. | 
The Nelson Lacrosse Club met defeat | 
from Vancouver by 4 goals to "2 That | é 
the visitors did not come down to the 
‘const to love was evident to the 1,000 apec- } 
tators who watched the stubborn game | 
they put up against the Winners, __ Indi- 
vidially Neleon> perhaps has as fasta 
clyb as plays the game, but they were no 
match for Vancouver, Ih almost every | 
way they showed skill and proficiency | 
on the field, but In stick-handling, catch- | 
ing and passing they were notleeably out- 
classed, 

The teama were: 

_ Vancouver. 
G. Matheson. . 
A. Allen 


/ 


¢ Nelson. 
peeeee Goal........B. velin 
-Point.......... Fe nev | 
Cover. Fr w= Grant! 
bovsede Thompson | 
tnd Detence;.. ‘D- Btackwood | 
,.trd Defence..,. H, Howden | 
-Centre. «A. Jeffs 
D. MeNichol | 
A. Perrier 


. Kerr 
BHM. 
W. Chase . 
Ww. Foreman 
F. 


Wright ind Home 


Pp 
dD. 
M 


Mason 
Broith.. 
Oppenheimer 


Inside Home... 
Field Captain,..V 
Unipire, 


J. Fraser | 
Galliher | 
Burns 


A 
K: 
Here are some of the Newh-Advertiser 

lacrosse reporter's notes of the game: 

In checking, Nelson had the best of | 
the lay, but Vancouver easily ovtelass- | 

A~strugéle | 

elson home at this-stiére-of the'| 
game gave the onlookers a sample of a-| 
crosse that is not witnessed at all| 
Not that the #tyle was pretty, | 
but it was hard fought and clean, and / 
the excitement fose high, while the tion- 
ore ecemed evenly divided, Vancouver 
finally Wetted down 1” Tinoy- tactics, | 
while the uf countrymen continued 
play every man for himeeif 

The fed by Reynolds, | 
playing very pretty | 
and only the great strength ot | 
the Nelson defence kept the wWify greys 
from rong up a store 

Try.os. they might. the -Vancouxer—ie=t 
fences could not get the ball away. from} 
thelr territéry. The shots were pouring 
in_en Matheson..1t began to dawn-upon+ 
the Spectators that the Nelsons 
working very hard, but. altogether 
vidually that the play any  mo- 
ment might work tts #ar Neigon’s 
defenc+. And so it did. 

It wis apparent, however, that Nel- 
son had a strong defence tn Lynch, Grant 
end Thompson. Some attempt, was ates 
at combination with poor results. Balls, 
no matter how Well passed; psort'{ 
handtedin the picking up, an@ many? 
of them were. very poorly delivered, as} 
often ag not falling into the atick of the| 
watchfvl Cowan or Foreman. Then the 
visitors resorted to the old thine dodging | 

thods, Their ability in this: line: shows | 
ed them at onee to be out of tough with 
the methods of modern lacrosse. It was 
eaay nough sometimes to dodge one) 
man, but the second ended in a -apill and | 

a lost ball. Rev. A. W. Hayer was play- | 

ing a great game for the touristy, Dut} 

like the rest he 4 solely on his | 
own efforts. In a he gener-/ 
ally « 


and] 

again applauded for his 
quarters, Cries-of-“Bully boy; parson; 
and “t@ minister's all right” sang out 
when he made a conspicuously good plece | 
of play 

The fourth game was 
the manner in which it slowed 
during of the visitors 
| Jeffs’ magnificent rur and down the 
field were also feature. From every 
standpoint this was the best game of the 
six. 

And te wind-up with the. Vancouver re- 
porter ventures into the realm of 
phecy, incidentally giving his estimate 
of the comparative strength of the 
vincial. teams. He says: “Nelson's claims 
en the provinctal championship will have | 
to £9 unsatisfied this They may 
win from Victeria. They ought to win at} 
From Westminster they can-} 


on the 


to 


Vancouver home 


were 
indi- | 
at 


into 


and 


were 


depend 
sensiknes 
and was time 
work at 


amie out on top, 


close 


remarkable for 
the en- 
strength defence 
~s Up 


" 


pro- 


pro- 


season 


not win,” 

The match between 
| the Nelson to-morrow 
edonia ground, 


the J.B.A.A. and 
afternoon on Cal-| 
commences at 4:30 and! 
should attract « large crowd, if only to 
encourage the visitors their attempt 
| to extend provincial , lacrosse chrpuanegt 
the province. 


in 


—o-— . 
THE RIFLE. | 
SATURDAY'S SHOOTING 
Clover Polat ride 
a match between 
Navy and the 
afternoon 


range war the 
teams 


of | 
H 
*Sat- | 
blae 
curtons | 


scene 
representing 
local volunteers on 
For some time the 
had wa idea that the 

that of the local] 
Wear over thelr shooting optle had | 
a good deal to do Wil The “scoret™ they’y 
rolled up. It may be sald that the techn: | 
esl, term iu rifle shooting for the sald | 
“fixing’* ta orthoptic, apd it may be Short 
i described ae an 4 aptatlon of the peep 
sight which ts weed on sporting rifles, the 
Principal difference being that. whilst in | 
the latter cas¢ the “peep” part of the) 
sight ie affixed to the rifle, in the former: 
ive the “peep” Is fixed to front of the eye" 
of the shooter. The effect on the shooter | 
in either case la very similar. The use of | 
the orthoptic, or peep sight, without doubt 
cpables the shooter to obtain 
clearer foresight; hé can yee a Oner line 
on the backstght, and -ts° genersity feaw! 
affected by sudden changes of Night. With 


Jacke 
| toil ng 


ts have 
fixings nome 


| cracks 


a much, 


their usual happy knack of-ralling things | 
the bluojackets tuive dub bed 
ples, and Tt waa 


Kidney Pills glways do what is claimed 
for them. Never fall or dieappoint, even 

) In the worst cases of kidney complaint. 
Mrs. W. J. Ford, 638 York street, says: 
“My husband has had kidney trowbles for 
a lowg time, aud when he commenced tak- 
| Ing Doan's Kidney Villa waa in very poor 
health and’ quite weak. Fle had a greal 
deal of pain tn. his hack, with-other symp- 
toma of. kidney diseas Dean's Kidney 
Pills ‘hewe cured him completely; and I 
} tearthig. monumend them : 
You ean always rely on Doan's Kidney 
Pitle te core Backac Tiabetes, Dropay, 
Bright’s Dieease, Scalding of the me, 
Gravel, Rhewmatism, Neuralgia, Séiatiea, 

Severe Headach®; Dizzy. Spells, ete. ry 
If you are a sufferer and want to give 
Pons's Kidney Pills 6 trial, we have auch 
confidence they will do you good that we 
will send you a. full sized box free of 
vharge. The. Doan Kidney Pill Ca,, To- 
ronte, Ont. 


made article exhibited on the 
renge by the Navy boys would, however, 
lead one to belleve that the ‘optic question 
hwt taken a firm bold. of’ thelr minds, -and 
that tn and fer were In danger of be 
coming seurce commodities in Faquimalt. 
The resaits of the match, which are given | 
below,” go to whow that whilst finer scores 
can po doubt be pit up with the ald of 
such adjuncts 24 orthoptics, etc, ete. | 
these-are bf. no means fudispensable,. vig 
thelr use by a rifle shot docs nht- mean that 
he cannot shoot fairly—-well withont thet. | 
The weather for shooting waa typical of | 
Cever Point range—the vernal half a gale | 
of wind from the right and thetighttatriy 
good, There ts no doubt that the volunteer 
team had a considera the fflvantage In the 
fntimaute knowledge they, without excep 
tion, poasesa of pecullarities sf. the 
rasge, aa well ae from the fact that, owing 
to there belng no rifle range adjacent to 


the 


) Week; board, ‘ga, 00, 


“po practice, 


} Bomb, 


} Lahor Day 


[Victoria and. the ¢ 


* dhe 
| suthorined 


i f'ttmile 


ter, but it wag°not until McDowell, 
“te now under contract to 4he Pend Val-- 


' the 


| Foulkes again 


JON MICHAEL, Prop. 
65,67,69 VICTORIA 


YATES 8T 


First-class ser 
t 
Rone 


at rr 
’ _ Ae! 


ni refitted 


GNA Richtee SS ah 
Meals: te, beds, 25: rooma, $190 per 


"Phone 618, 

— ——- 
Beauinalt, the: Navy sbota get little or 
The following ape the scores: 

FIFTH REGIMENT, 
200 foo 
hs) 
w- 
19 


Bo 
‘22 


TL 
Bomb. 8. W, Bodley 
‘Hgt, Ke MeBongal 
Guor. J, Caven 
Major Willlama 
Gaur. J, Webb .. 
Sgt. W. H, Lettice.. 
Tomb. W. Winaby 
Gonr. R. J. Vutler 
Gour A. Hrayshaw 
A. W. Currie, 


Range Totals 
i THE NAVY, 
Bos) 
Gormley, RM, 27 
Pike a 
wibe, Txt clase 


Kgt. T. 
Pte. © 


I Duns vm, 20 cies TO. 2 
W. Wyatt, A. B 


ents 5. Cowan ...Jst Home..Rey. A. W. Hayet | 4 Jarviey int ciase 24> 
and | K. Cam pbell,.Outside Home. .C. Archibald | 7, Slee, I. 


acaman 
Hole, Ist 


Ww. W class 
rm oa. = 

W, Le Foale, 
Pr O.. 


A Freathy, 


clase 
6 
is 


Tat 
A, B..... 
Range ‘Votals 25 170 S18 
THE WHEEL. 


THE LOCAL MEET. 


There ig some tatk of a cycling. meet 
at Ouk Bay on September tnd date 
which would fit In well with the Nanaimo 
meet chief Conrul Prescott 
to Induce Beo 
“flyer,” to break his home- 
here and. participate at Oak 


a 


in endeavoring Goodson 
the Avstralian 
ward J 


urney 


} Bay 


AT 
The Terminal City 
should attract a-gbodly attendance from 
LPLN> Co. have. made 
a special rate of B return between Vic- 
toria and Vancauver. 


WORLD'S MEET. 


att The 
te \ today 


VANCOUVER. 


meet on Saturday 


Work © 
Only 
amateur 
Hooper and Nel 
What was ex 
of the after 
Ip match betwoen the 


Montrest; TIPE 


was brought on 


record: was br five mille 


tandem unpace \ 
reiuced to 10:14 
ted to be the 
the champ 
ners of the mile 
Mo ional championships, turned out a dis 
appointment, “as Major Taylor, the colored 
ftyer, refused to ride sinst Sacnmersartll, 
the Baglish amatedr champlon there 
fore, took the world's championship by de 
fuult, riding In 2:78 The 
champlonstip event on the programme, the 
WALKilometre  pagfessional 
eosy thing fan-Hasen beet pel Cie lest. 
rate was a fizele an 
oftictal the back 
at half the Rayal 
Candiens of “Poronts whh 
the Queen Citys, of Tor In the 
loternaticonal tes for 
Challenge Shield coun 
represented 


son 
beat event 


anatenr and mile pre 


who, 


only « 


rac Was in 
us 
riders 

The 


extably 


road some 
tern 

distance 
wo 


verter, 


about 
u 
nest 
» race 
twe 
nited 
a tie © e 
polnts, ‘The 
from the pistot 
united States we 


t'yelist 

we States 
hk teat 
waa 8 
th 
n-wanily 

Major 
Cambridge 


trles re 
and Canada, 
scortag 1. 
jockeying 

stretch, and the T 
Ie Two-olle 
Taylor Pom 
Mass, Time, 


and 
rune 
race to 
professional 
Butler. 
4:42 15. 
race 
Iowa, 


Time, 


multe 

won; 
mooond, 
amoteur~ 
vod John 
wei4a 14. 

Wateon 


Five-smile tandem por 
Pied. Hooper’ Des Moines 
A. Chicage, wen 
handieap professional 
Masa, 225 yards 
T. B. MeCarthy, Toronto, 40 yards. 
ond; Alf. Boake, Toronto, 
is Kianey, Brantford, 
fourth. Time, 10:45 15. 


Colum bes ract, 


Nelnon. 


Mive-mile 


Cloeman, Toston, won; 


wei 
third; 
iM) yards 


yarda, 
o 
trophy mile amateur, 
Wf pla 
H ch 


ive “ty 
nd 


Time, 


open to winners of Brat and secor oa 


iu all o 
cage, Ww 
Lester 

2:28 3. 


vents—Basl 
Let Max 
Pittaburg, 


nateur ¢ 
ory J 
Wlisen 


treal, 


third 


—o 
THE TURF. 
FANNY PUTNAM 
news has been received 
Stevenson that his racing 
hos re-in 
stated by the Trotting Adso- 
clat‘en Last was entered 
out of her class by her driver, Andy. Mc- 
Dowell, at Dubuque, Iowa, and won a 
$1,000 -- purse, This caused considerable 
comment, and an investigation followed, 
with the result that she way found she 
had a mark of 2:09 A fine of $80) was im- 
posed on her owner and her driver, her 
owner, Mr. Stevenson, being an innocent 
party to the affair, However, she was 
barred from . stasting on an, American 
track until the fine was paid, Consider- 
able correspondence followed, Mr. J. A 
Fullerton interesting himself in the mat- 
who 


weicome 
w.@ 
Fanny 


The 
by Mr. 


mare, been 


Putnam 
American 


season she 


ley stock farm, paid the fine, which he 
was compelled to do before-he coilld drive 
on an American track, that the mare was 
reinstated. Fannie Putnam. will make 
her first start at the Breeders’ meeting, 
Santa Rosa, on, Saturday night, From 
there she will go to Oakiand, and so on 
through the California clrovit; racing 
until November #0. “She has already been 
entered for nine $1,000 and two #400 purses 
Bhe was well driven by C. W, Jeffries of 
Spreckiés & Knapp stables, and 
should be a money-winner this season, 
$$ Quaren 
LAWN TENNIS, 
FOULKES 18 CHAMPION, ——— 
on Saturday Mr. J. F. 
established himself as 
champion of the Pacific Northwest, de- 
feating Mr. G. A. Hurd In three straight 
sets, 6-1, 6-0, Gi. The mixed doubles’ 
championship was won by Mr. Foulkes 
and Miss Beattie, who. defe d Mr. Sam 
Ruseoll and Miss Retly, 6-2, . urd and 
Russell defeated Foulkes and ‘Goward mm 
the men’s. doubles, the game being hard 


At Seattlo 


‘fought andthe result often in doubt, the - 


scores were 1-6, 6-5, 5-7; 6-0, 8-4, 8-6. 
AT COWICHAN. 

Following are 

the Cowichan ‘tournament, 
concluded on Saturday: 

First round (gentiemen’s open singles) 

. M: Hills beat B. Prior, 6-1, 63; R, EB. 

Barkley beat W. H. Elkington, 6-0, 6-0; 

R. Musgrave beat A. Ward, 6-1, 6-3, B. BL. 
Drake beat R. St. Master, 7-6, 1-6. 


the results of games in 
which was 


Rev 


the - 


——————_berry—Compoudd,"” ete In 


“ Secbnd round—Barkley beat Hills, 6-0, 
@1; Musgrave beat Drake, 7-5, 6-2. 

Final round—Borkiey beat Mudgrave, 
6-8, 6-3, 6-0. 

Lawn’ open. singles, (irst rownd)—Miss 
¥. Drake beat Miss N, Robertson, ¢2, 60. 

Second round—Mies M. Livingston beat 


oO Sttae- Ch Livingston; 0, 6-2; Miss Robert-. 


son beat Miss EB. Drake, 64, 62; Miss 
Musgrave beat Miss N.~ Drake, 6-4, 6-0; 
Miss Maltland-Dougall peat Mra. “Leather, 
2-6, 6-4,7-6. 


| 
Third round—Miss M. Livingston beat 
Mias Musgraye | 


Miss Robertson, 6-3, 6-1; 
beat Miss Maitiand-Dougall, 6-3, 6-3. 

Fina) round—Miss Musgrave beat Aisa 
‘Livingston, "0, 2, Gt ; 
a 
ORICKET. 

VISITORS DEFBATED. 

The Vancouver Cricket Club eleven met 
an eleven representing the Navy on Sat- 
urday afternoon on’ the Canteen- Grounds, 


the result being «victory for the home’ 


team by an Thé 

scores follow: 

VANCOUVER CRICKET CLUB, 
First_ Innings. 

Ht. G._Clinten, b Barraclough.. 
T. & Saunders, ¢ Metcalfe, b Oxlade.. 
F. N Chaldecott, b Barraclough... 

A. MeCrary, » ‘Rarraciough. 
F, a, Crickmay, c Barnes, 

clough ° 
A. G, Thynne, b Oxiaile . 
J. 8. Tait, b Barraclough 
0. O. Nichols, b Barraclough 
E. A. Digby, b Barnes... 
F. F. Burna, b Barnes 
Ww. R. Digby, not out 

Extras. .,i<..... 


innings and 33 runa, 


b. Barra- 


Total sedssorees 
‘ Becond, Innings. 
H G. Elinton, not out 
Chaléecott, run out 
Saunders, c Hay, 
Crickmay,“b-Oxtadte 
>. Digby, b Barraclough.. 
. R. Digby, b Oxlade 
Tait, 'b w, b Barraclough 
Nichots, c @&-b Oxinde 
A. G, Thynne, c Tiay, b Barraciough 
F. F. Burns, c Simmons, b Oxlade 
A. MeCreary, c Metcalfe, b Oxlade 
Extras 


b Oxlade 


o-0 


4 
a 
4 
Total pee wi | 
NAVY. 
Titent>Meteatte, TN kw Burns 
Leeut Simmons, RB-N,,.b Nicholsesiccx 
Capt. Barnes, R.M.A « 
Nichols 
Lieut. Cayley 


Burns, be 

RN) b W. R. Digby 

Capt. Poole, R-M.A,,> Nichols 

Dr, ..arries, RLN_, b EAC Digby 

Corp. Barraciough, ReM-A,, not out.... % 

Lieut. Hay, K.N., b W: R. Digby.. 

Lieut. Collins, R.N., b Nichols 

Capt. Finnts, R.N;; b Nichols, 
decott, b WR. Digty 

Liew.” Oxide, KN. h Nictiots 
Extras 


Chal- 


4 
Total 


— 
YACHTIAG 
THE CAPTAIN'S CUP 


wo TES, VACINS Shared. On. BAPEOGR Yt. 


ternoon in the first of the 
for the cup donated by Mr. 
ley, the Noreen, Trill 
Siren and contrary 
tions, not competing 
and the Vrill 
minutes ahead 
handicapped by 
ing the last 


series of races 
W. H. Lang 
Viela, the 
to expecta- 
It was a good race 
the ine 2 
the Viola 
crew,-be- 


and 
Lurine 


won, croasing 
of the Ne 
an insufficient 


reen 


the 
to 


number of 


the Linda 


Yesterday afternoon & 
local yachts eccompanied 
Esquimalt. 


If you are nervous or dyspeptic try Car- 
ter's Littte Nerve Pili, Dyapepala makes: 


‘i Pp eserecncrenuttnet sad cnabte HA PRA RBAL RA at ne ee need An 


+ are 


you nervous, and wervowsriess makes you | 


elther one renders you miser 
Uttle pills cure both. 


APPALLING LOSS OF 


H bri 
fe, and thes 
LIFE 


Porto Rica, 
Hyves 


recent 


bodies 


Ponce, 
wand 
in the 
bupdred 
of 
persons 
trict, 
the 
were removed fo the 
tbucoa, Adjutas 
tated, and tn 
lages were «wept 


Aug Two thou 


are + been lost 


ha 
aud 


burted 
estimat 
drowned the 1 

the ot the storm 
was wrecked and its patients 
miliiZary hospital. 
Humacao were 


been 


city Pouce, it is 


were lu 
During 


hospital 


progress 


Yay 

devas 
vil 

One 


and 
lusta neers 

of 
reported to have 
Everybody 
aul 


BOLLE 


entire 
out existence, 
hundred persons are 
killed coffee plantation 
is Destilonee thr 


needed. 


bern 
vo a 
ruined ens, 
money. Abd. work are 

UITLANDERS MAY: RE ARRESTED 
o— 
Tie 


petown ‘suys 


London, 
the Daily 
from 


Transvaal 


Ave. 
Mall at © 
prominent 


correspondent of 
“I loarn 
that the 
goverument bax prepared war 
rant» for the of prominent reform 
ers. Mitton of affaira at 


Aa excuses 


a ex-reformer 
arrest 
the 
pr 
will t 


whenever 


Johannesburg vid 


Ultlanders is hontages 


‘Labet Them 
“Dangerous.” 


All the Im‘tations of and Substitutes 
For Dr. Powlér's Extract of 
Wild Strawberry. 


More 
able 


than ever this summer, diahdnor- 
aad dlereputable pharwateutioenl cou- 
market with cheap 
wnd worthless preparations designed to’ be 
Unitations of Dr. 
Strawberry. 
Some of these are even 
tract of Wik Strawberry 


corms are Qooding the 


labelled “Ex. 
“Wild Straw- 
the lion: | 
le decelyed by. the name, 
trated te —purchase them, -thinklag they 
ire getting the genulne Dr. Fowler's. 

Are you ready to risk your health 
ape your life, to these no same, no repe 
tation, Ukely dangerous, s0-called 
lorry Extracts 

For more than # years now Dr, Fowler's 
Extract of Wid Strawberry has been re 
gnized by both the people and the tedl 
cal-proféssion as the’ wtandant remety for 
Diarrhoes, Dysentery, Cramps, Qolle, Sum- 
Jer. Complaint, Choler..Markia,.Choredt. 
bowels of 


the public may 


yer 


, infantum and all faxes of the 
| ehtidren and adultk 
| You can always rely on It in the thie of 
feed to do Jost what ie claiired for it 
ut the tnttattons—what te thelr record, 
where the guarantee that they will cure? 
Thins. Well before-you take anyone of 
them, Ask your druggist for Dr. Powler's 
Iixtract of Wild Strawberry’ and we ere 
coufident you will nat he refused that 


reasonable request. . 


Fowler's Extract of Wid | 
! you are Interested send your address to 


Straw-. 


| were 


thrown'so fat forward to get a short wheel 


’ 


| fall in our duty If we 


} 


| arp held at the St, James street offic 4 


Established I7P4, 


BUSHMILLS 


PURE MALT | 


- WHISKEY © 


One of Nature's greatest wonders is the Giant's Caise- 
way, quile near to which the world-famed OLD BuSHMILLS 
DisTiLLery is situated, 

The geological formation of the adjoining country is such 
that-bafley:of an extraordinary fine quality is grown there, 
ard the water obtainéd from this region possesses wonderful 
medicinal qualiiics, her ce the great superiority of the Whiskey 
made at Bushmills over any other in the world. 


: Earsman, Hardie & Co., Agents, Victoria. 


00000000000060000000000000000000000. 
ee 


alee TRA) 


MAA ARK 


“Bnoobooccgs09900000060 200600 


te) 


ae 


interesting to Ladies. 


Particularly iavite the ladies to in- 
espeet their 


Carpets, 
Drapery ana 
Fine Furalture 
Depariments 


NOTE=Whetter you wisi to purchase or not we shall be pleased to si 
through our extensive showronms and make you acqualated with the latest prods 


WEILER BROS: 


: These Departmants entirely cover the 
Second and Third Floors in their Hand- 
some Quarters at the Corner of Gov- 
erimentand Broughton Streéts: 


ow you 


tions 


4 
os 
aif 


AN LOCOMOTIVES 
VPREFERKED 


WHY AMBE AE 


| [ieee 4 


: NEW VANCOUVER 
: 


“From various parts of the world “state 
wénts reach us to the effect that the 
roughly made 
in a ma thst. ey 
Teautifally Anished Engtish or 
says the London E 


eet 
Amwerioun 
than 
ch mack 
"We 

nts «boul 
We 


englue 


paratively 
GOAL GO., Ld. 


Sn NANAIMO, B.C. 


SAMUEL M. ROBINS, 
— Samcnnnatee. 


Coal 


$4. 29 


Per ton, delivered. 
Gowd fuel for b ted ing stoves, 


$5.50; 


Per ton, delivered: 


KINGHAM & C0., 


44 FORT STREET, 


Sole Agents for Victoria for the New 
Wellington Coljieries, 


machine its 


8 


brother,” 
po reason Why ench stat 
uu 


engines, 


have 
Arnot. 

‘the 
our 


ade I amy not 
gpccitica } fox 
ak acqualuted 
practice of neh 
knowledge of the f 
certain that the engines 
from specifications and Imapection 
wet the best adapted to the Intended werk 
We do not wish to priticise individual 
and we find ft bard to stag way 
of 1 which 
pre this man ¢ 
may say that we 
wtauce ly which six-wheeled engin 
rigid pl 
long whe 
Awe 
with four wheels coupled and 
“The English engines burst 
om it, and did mischief 
thrown on one side and the 
can. engines did all the work. We 
to. mind another case in which two beaut 
fully je engines, bhullt jal design 
for the 3 inch gauge, 5 ed 
with a very bad road that ey 
be - practically’ rebalit, the wheel 
rtened and the-axle boxes cot away 
side play before they could 
have seen engines with the 


ourselves 
inspectors, 4 bringing 


own to bear, 


Mined by 
White 
Labor. 


which result 


the are 


anes by 
will not se 
that 


mind one 


on 
but 


(ration. 


* hardly on w 


Best Protection 
tstand Net Coal j 


can call & n 
with 
frames and a ‘eomypat 
were 


of much r 


base, wet to 


rican gines 
a. bogl« 

the read, ran 
that | they 


Ameri 


Best Protection | 
Island Lump Coal ( 


: 
: 
4 
ig 
: 
: 


can call 


m to spe 
such 
had 


bas 


5 feet 


havoc 


be used 


Telephone Call No. 6a7. 
Wharf, Store St. (Spratt's Wharf.) 


FRPP SPER ERE E SERS SENSORS 


* 

We cylinders 
that the Iiters jumpet 
themee!ves off a bad road and coukl not be 

ceed Ul they were fitted with pony (tuck«, 
which the designer would pot at any 
priew, -The highs exes of material 


and otenort workma neatly 


Vet me: engines 


‘- 
: 
: 


: 
. 


have 
Hlenoe 
the of 

Wilt-not compensate for sock defects of de 
gn 

“We 
no particular pleasure 
on the other hand, we 
of 


country 


beauty 


RIDE A 


Brantford 


AND ENJOY LIE E. 


Py 
affords us 
thus. } 

best 


say that it 
to ite 
have the 


heed scarcely 
wr 
in 
locomotive buallders of this 
heart, and 
said pleasant things 
that the typical Bug 
the for Atmstralla 
or China Africa, ju 
for the Iwasa of 
the Untted Kingdem We rep that Am 
erleans more folly underitaud what Is 
wanted for ‘rettwiry wervicg ta. a. new aud 
cheap country than we do, and that we 
ight not to be too. proud from 
The  ltomotiveboliding ‘firme in 
Lis country are by means 
dnd we venture to @uy that they 
thing to learn from Americans or any ont 
olge. But, thie is not true of other people | 
| in this country, and It ts the other peopte | 
who settle w hat the locomotive tor Mfatant * 
| lands’ shall be."* j 


CANCERS AND TUMORS. 
A. PAINLESS MRTHOD QF TREATMPST | ONIONS & PLIMELY 
The knife and plaster are not now nee on! 
mary Tr order ta cure these “dhvenses.- If a 44 Broad Street 


ests the 


at we should whollx | 


and maintained Hal 
locomotive 
South America, 


nse it le the 


must be Dowt 
or 


rp 


to learn 


om. 


no nHmerots 


CALL AND SEE STOCK OF 


have 'hno 


We have the finest stock iu ihe city, 
cles from $35. Guaranteed, 


Bicy- 


+: 
&ToTt & JURY, Box ?, Bowmasyitre, Ont. 
FREE ~ ART Cc . CLASSES. 


Those desiring. free instraction io art | 
should apply to The Canadian Royal Art 
Union, Limited, 288 and 240 St. capa 
street, Montreal, Canada. {¢ 

The Art School is maintained in tee 
Mechanics’ Institute Building, Mon-| ¥ 
trenl? and is absolutely free. Moathiy | 
' drawings, on the Inst day of each mont 


Ei! 
HIE 


| 
si eh el | a lt et tc 


We offer A on remalod r of our 
Byp stock of 


BESESE ESS EESC ELE K CIES RECER 
FOR CASH ONLY 


Here's a chance to get the hiwhest grade 
wheels on the market at less tan lowest 


ie 0 really — willbe given. 


| 
¢ M.W. WAITT &Co. 
| 


for the distribution of Works of Art. / 


“Mt Maniwaki, died in OUawa 
Saturday night. She to 
the Canede- Ataatic. mithrny | 


Minas Kya, 
howpltal on 
fared” Te 
wreek 


GARFIELD FIG SYRUP 


Best Blood Medicine for 
Babies and Children....... 


war 


"60 GoverNMeENT Sr. 


Agents for Cotumbia, Ctevetacd and 


j - Crescent Bicycles, 
ALL DEALERS. } . 
| AEFEOEOUSUOEEEEPEPE FECT 


25C.—_— wp 


ee Le eT 


policy which &equired its name only from 
the leader of the party, which & now ad- 
wilted to he “ut"6r date and to represent 
Conditions" that ho" tonger exist 

The position is a very interesting one. 
Having repudiated its Jeader and every 


‘ge of bik forsneroettogaaes.traving te: 


\ 


UL prow: 


7. 


VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, 


a ‘sum of money to compensate him‘ for 
the ruin itself had wrought. Some people 
think "his fs not-the-proper sort of thing | 
to do; and that the law ought 16 mike 
full amends and as publicly a the pun- 
ishment was meted; but a little thought 
io, the average. intelligence: 


-clared that they are no longer political *that-the course adopted by the law of ; t 
i porsfbitities, the Cotonist is now without’ Britain ts, after ‘all, though it looks so} Miners Find Ore: Which Assays 


LIMITED. 


Supply from their Nanaimo, Southfield 
Pind Protection island Colicriee 


Coal 


: of the following grades: 


Double Screened Lump, ; Attorney-General ‘of British 
Run he Mine, x ‘si 
Wasi i Nuts and Screenings )) | 


-> 


SAMUEL M. ROBINS - - SUPERINTENDENT 


H.. & leader and without a party...Who, then, 
| ‘deep it follow; what part# Js it. prepared 
to suppert? 


Steam. 
Ga ee 
House . 


THE SITUATION. 

| m discussing the political situation the 
‘letra Anis been tinde that Mr.” Hender- 

son, the member for Westminster and 
; Columbia, 
was originally elected as a supporter of 
the late Turner administration, whereas 
the fact is that at the: retent election no 
induced the 
| Suffrages Of the ratepayers of the Royat 


man could be to solicit 


a ~ = — — : 
T | City as the candidate of the now ad- 
he Daily Times. mittedly defunct party. Mr, Henderson 
placed his. name before the people as an 


eee 


Published every Gay lexcent Sunday) 
by t 


| | 
Times Printing & Publishing Co. 


W. TEMPLEMAN, Manager. | 


| 
26 Broad street 
No, 45 


Brown was 
an Although 
Mr. Henderson Was, known to be person- 
ally very populaf@t#i the riding 
no denying that the then opposition ex- 
Mr. Brown to carry the const!- 
tuency, There is no doubt that the force- 
' ful addresses and strong personal popu~ 
larity of Mr. Henderson were responsible 
for the defeat of Mr. Brown, and that the 
Attorney-General was probably the only 
man in’ political life in British Columbia 


/ independent, while Mr, J. C 


out-and-out oppositiontist. 


there: is 


Offices. 
Telephone. 


; SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: 


month, by carrier. . 
week, by carrier. .20 
Kk Times, per anoum. 1.50 


— 


ges of advertisements must 

the office not later than 

if recelred later than that 
the following day 


pected 


Daily, ot) 
Dal one 
Tw'ce-a-W 
en 
Copy for ch 
be handed t 
lio k a 


who stood any chance of success in such 


contest Under thease circumstances 
even with the situring balt.-thrown out 
who thinks he with 
that the. man who contests 


#eat with the Attorney-General may hive 


Ail_eommmapnications -intenddd) for_pulilica- 
flan khonld “be addressed Rditor “tse 
Tinies,”” Victoria, B.C, j 
——— nm + thority 
The HATLY TIMES ts On Sate at the Fol ; 

lowing Places tn Victorla 
CASHMORE'S. BOOK EXCHANGE, 
bougtas street 
EMORY'S CIGAR STAND, which the eye of faith sees in-process of 
Ftreet. : 
BNIGHMT 3S... STATIONERY... STORE, ..74,, formativonethe ..chance..of the, cagdidate 
¥ 2 street; | cf a panty.which is practically withest a 


by one speaks au- 


EA teacreenve Pasioat the 


choice of the cabinet 
T be at’ the 


105 his positions which 


disposal of a government 
23 Government 


H ~ MASON, Dawson Hotel Entriice, 


ty She ts now -wite 


harsh, the only way that it can make 
amends for thé eruel wrong it may inaa- 
vertently commit, 

But it is altogether different in France. 


If Dreyfus be aoquitted his innocence will ; 
have to be publicly proclaimed in the | Dawson Murderers to Have Been 


(thirty thousand communes of France by|~ Hanged August 4th-Tram- 
offie@s .of the republic; tie honors will way Nut Sold. 

have to be publicly restored to him anil 
suitable compensation will have to be 
mide (o him. So it will be-seen that it 
is rather a serious matter for the gov- 
ernment whichever way it goes, and the 
only satisfaction that will remain to it 
is the fact that Mercier, Paty de Clam 
and Meterhazy and others will next have 
to stand thelr trial on a much more ser- 
lous charge than that made aguinst Drey- 


, » $12,000 to the Ton in Big 
; Born District. 


News was brought by the steamer Tees | 
which reached port from Skagway ‘on 
Saturday evening of a wonderfally Fich | 
find of free*milling ore in the Atlin dis- | 
trict, The find was made by ©. As Ane} 
derson, of Northfield, who spent several 
yeurs.on Texada Island prospecting, and! 
J. Pearson, of Yakima, Washington. ci | 
Munro, -D... Kitszour and William 
Haley, who affived fom Atlin by the | 
Tees, say the «trike was made in the 
Big Horn district, Aséays of the rock 
ran from $2,000 to nearly $13,000 in 
gold to the ton, Samples of the ore! 
were sent to Atlin™té be assayed. - Mr. | 
Pinder, of the Baik of British North 
America, who did-the work, certified as 
follows: No. 161, $12,952 gold; No. 162, 
$12,500 gold; No: 162, $222 silver; No.- 
163, $2,904 gold. 

The ore, it is sald, was taken—in- 
‘discriminately from different portions of 
the ledge, Pwo pounds of the tock was 
roasted, powdered and washed in a pros- 
pecting pan, It yielded $7. The gold 's 
of-a-iraty—nature, ruuning through the, 
rock in thyers. A stringer of -moly- 
bednum is running in‘ the lode. 

On the ‘Tees were a large number of 
passengers direct from Dawson, some of 
whom teft on August 2ed; thus making 
the journey from Dawson to Victoria in 
ten days. They. left the Klendike ecapi- 
tal-on-the C. D, Co.'s steamer Canadian, 
Witch broke her past, reeord-torthe-triy 
to White—Morse, “Mere they were trans: 


fus. . sept 
Those are the real enemies of France, 
and it will come as a fitting end to the 
celebrated: case if, they be found. guilty 
and be put away wheré they will not be 
able to do any further mischief, They 
are much more likely to be shot 
Dreyfus stands as the individual 
whom the forces of right and wrong are 
doing battle; the world looks on and 


over 


hopes the right will triumph. 


Mr.. George E rather a 
Rerd-rep-from- Mr Fietding “in the Com 
mons his jeremiad the 
work of the session. Mr Fielding, amid 
Cheering, “Cech “that only about one 
million dollars would be added.to the pub- 
Tie WeHr “vr Canada thit-year—as-againat 
the average of six- millions during the 
eightetn years pt me Conservative 
indeed asleep .during that 
long night of politicat darkness, but ver- 
WWake. 


after on 


rule. 


Canada. was 


‘of siipport 
; ada, vagrants, and may be arrested and 


A new. comfort shoe without.clumsy looking 
toe. “Roomy but neat, fitting a broad foot 
easily while making’ it look stylish aiid nar- 
row. Light, Medium and Dark Tan, Seal 
Brown and Black. 14 sizes ands widths. 
Goodyear welted. Stamped on the soles 


= $3-5% $4.50 and $5.50 per.pair. ee 
ome" “The Slater Shoe.” 
. ' a re wd 


ERS Ee SIMONI AEA 


———————  e 


J. Pierey & Cn. 


Maw actureis cf 


sac, Wholesale Dry Goods 


y WHITE LABOR. 


25, 27, 28, 29 Yates Str 


~~ VICTORIA, B.C. 


haere, 
WANTED—A young fady, for dry sovda 


store in city; must Rave experience. Ad- 
dress, Dry . Goods, ‘riiBew flies, 


nts. 
pare ‘Sutwcriptian 
Broad street. 


GOOD FITS. GUARANTERBD; general sew. 


i solicited; $1.00 per day" 179 
street. peat ses nd 


POR SALE, 


KEEP our THe ELIBS—Chea, 
\ doors, su) a meat safes, at 
Vy bliiiastoa's, Carpenters, 100 


RBADY--1800 fasue Williams’ Directory, 
Offices, 28 Broad street, ” 


POR SALE—Chéap for ensh, 100 acres of 
Jand one mMe from Shawhigan Stduon, 
with good. barn and gu:bulkiings and 
bumber of bearing frult trees. Apply to 
G@: W. MeKean, Shawnigap Leake i. “« 
N. Railway, ah 


TO LET. 


THB ALDERLEA HOTEL at. Duncan's 
Station to let or for sale, furnished and 
in.good running order, doing a good bust- 
ness. For particulars, apply to Fell *« 
Co, Fort street, Victoria, or to the own- 
er, Wm. Beaumortt, at Maple Bay, Van- 
couver Island. : 


10 RENT—Office In the 
ground oor. Apply at 


Times batiay 
Times office. = 


® RPWARD— Misiaig om the “‘Bagles re 
turning excursion—tratn; “Sunday evening, 
a “Oyclone’’ Hand Camera; has an arrow 
fnted in red.. rownd relense screw. 
‘nder please return to Times office, 
Broad street, 


| ‘ 7 

extended by the Yukon government, and| richer gravel is being’ taken out to-day 
H “And - 
Hiondike,~ explaihs Mr, aurdoch, “is a] 4 &-W:-Witson, Piitnbers and Gas Fit- 
* one 
He alae -predicts Anat rich 
SOURLT, ill. yet. be.opened up between 


it asked for will be refused, 
_ “The authorites wisi to point out that? 
they do not intend to render any. auslat- 
ance to indigents, and would remind the | 
public that people without visible means | 
tre, Undtr the laws of Can 


| than was ¢ver taken out In -'5, 


hundred iboos on of 


another. 


piled top 


the SteWart and the Hootalinqua. 


j 
convicted on the charge.” | 
The Benet Sun keys that-the-tram | passengers on the 
Ways around White Horse Raptts, both) nas been raised 
¢ontrolled by the Macauley Company, 
have been sold to the White Pass &-Yu-| 
kon Railway Company, the price paid | 
being-$185,000.. From this it ia tofer-+} 
red-that the company propose extendtog} 
their line. down the river. } 


Tées, who claim 


rapids 


total wreck, with her back broken, 


her. 


He gives a different account of the-fate 
of the Anglian to that_brought by other 
she 
He and his companion 
affirm that When they passed Five Finger 
the Anglian wis: Tyg winost 
and 
thé Water twartng tke amin race” over 


MISCELLANEOUS. 


ters, Bell Hangers and ‘Tinsnilttiz; Deal- 
ers-fp the best descriptions of Heating, 
andy Cooking Stoves, Kanges, etc.: ship- 
ping supplied. at lowest. rates. “Broad - 
m ficteria.. B.C, Telephone éall 


SOCIETIES, , 


VIOTORIA COLUMBIA LODGE, 
No. w i en hg in every 
month a 280) Pemple,..D 
a street, at 7:30 p.m. ‘2 — 
B. 8. ODDY, Secretary. 


SCAVENGERS. 


EE AN Ht FEE 


Yet * street. 

VICTORIA BOOK ‘AND STATIONERY | 

COMPANY, 61 “Goverhment street 

fc. \. HIBBEN & COMPANY, 69 Govera-| 
ment etreet. 

F. /M™BELL, Tobaccontst, 
I street.——- : 
BEING E-ALARSHES News Agent: corners 

Yates and Government. 
H. W. WALKER (Switch Grocery), Bequl- | 
malt road. 
W. WILSY, 91 
MKS. CROOK, 
GEu,.J, COOK, 
T REDDING, 
West. 
_ 


S_NEW WEStaUNS PER. 4 
4 


ral Henderson, who 


92 Govern- 


Douglas stteet. 
Victoria West post-office. 
Victoria West 
Crailgiiwer road,” Victoria 


Westminster las 

1 situation. there as ir 
his re- 
not invite he) 
The men who’ 


both 


favorable for 

does 
Opposition 

on 


tive political workers 


genernl will, with 


Hender- 


‘election 
support Mr, 
It t& custeingry to speak 


at the 
exceptic ns 
of victory, at an 


and perhaps the view 


fidence 
tion 
the 
ed by 


tizans pf either . side 
se with which .th« 


wf thelr : ‘ te dis 


but in the case -of the bye-elex 


New Westminster only a few 


newspaper partizans are of the 
Attor | 


at the the 


opposition to 


& ghost of a chance 


the 
pion thf 22 


Mth 


nomination of can- 


d-inst.. and 


inst we will have 


Y days to-ascertain how} 


placed in the pro 


Turner organs. In our 


| 
rine 
nderson We nat return 
y acclamation, his opponent, it mat- 


ut who he may be, will be defeated 
large majority 


RNERISM AND THE COLONIST 


| 


| whom great things are exex 


&@ proposal to restore’ | the 


| 
é¢ would not meet with a | 


from the people 


worse 


Turner and his as- 


representing 


| 
in. British Colum- |! 
grens $0 comple tely 

position of the province: 
the 
provinel 


taken a long time toednvince 


that | 


nist leaders in 


its 
mt public op 
RET consequently 


not in accord with the views of a’ major- 


the But 
| 
in open, frank confession, that' does 


Judgment of the tate | 
suggested that 


5s being made of a necessity, bat) 


ity of ‘the 


it Is 


people of province 


infir credit to the 
Turner organ, Ti may’ be 
&@ viriue 
we are willing to 


of 
It sees, no doybt 


take & more charitable 
view our contemporary’s conversion. 
as the Times has been 
pointing out for years, that that. partic- 
Adler-kind -of-gevecnmeat_knowp as-Tur- 
nerism, and of which the Colonist was 
the chief apologist and defender, is un- 
suited the of a grow- 
ing province—is, indeed, inimice! to pret 
ent prosperity to the 3-4 
ture. embodiment 
of the view of Mr Mr. Kberts,] 
Mr. G. B. Martin; Col: Baker, as well as 
of those other men in or the 


monopolles and 


to requirements 


and a menace 
“Turneriam' was the 
Pooley, 
and out 
House who represented 
personal interests and not the 
of thé masses, and in admitting that 
“Turneriam ds dead beyond. the hope of 
resurrection , the organ practically turns 
its’ back on every member of the party 
If Mr. Turner is dead politically, so is Mr. 
Eberts, and Mr. Pooley, and Col. Baker, 
and all the others, for these men were 
responsible more than Mr, Turner for the 


interests 


+-head=-and-some 


| the 


| ory 
i 


| that 


Ot their policy was) 


of -whose-amembdrs—are 
Mr 


ader 


intriguing to oust Turner and grab 


the position of 1 themselves car- 


rying the constituency of New” Westmin- 


ister would seem to be very remate indeed. 


The-Aelm-i#-aleo ‘made that -evern-tt-the- 
win in New. Wesimin- 
will be defeated. in 


opposition do not 
tter the government 
Mr. 
his seat and Mi. Maftin and Mr. 
are now arrayed against the government 
Mr old of the 
province, is a British subject; js enti 

Vote” Ih the "previnte. and “is 
a member of the but it is 
said some imaginary techpicality will pre- 
is all 
claims from which 
Mr. Prentice is just 
as seclife In his seat to-day as he wast 


House, as Prentice cannot take 


Higgins 


Prentice is an resident 
ta 


Legisiature 


| to the court martial at Rennes 


vent him taking his seat, and that 
of the 
so much is expected. 


there is in one 


+ Tested. 


last ression, and because he is. secure his 


opponents are afraid to ‘proceed with the 
Mr. Higgins was at 
Mr 
1dministradion, occupied the high and re 
i position of of ths, 
sembly, Wut realaned "is 
to the of thy 
1 vigorously opposed the gov- 


lion agalost Rim, 


me time a supp<rter of Turner's 


Speaker 


side 
hamber-a 
hia former. friengs, and with 
defended 
He 


epponent 


ernment of 


great - ability und justified his 
was elected for 
of the then 
his redemption of this 
seat Turner. if 
Mr his 


from Mr. Semlin—and we do not think he 


action in so doing. 
Esquimalt os an 
nd 
defeated Mr 


has withdrawn 


government 
practically 


Higgins support 


bas stated that he has done so—by what 
process of reasoning could he justify his 


actions to the electors of his constituen- 


ey, Whe. such_a-short_time azo sent him 


acrofs James Bay as an adherent of the 
present government? Surely political his 


would b searched tn vain 


parallel case if the junior member 


squimalt were to again™tross the floor. 


and be me Turner. 


Mir. 


& supporter of Mr 
Martin is another: gentleman. from 
ted, the same 
man whose alleged doings excited the Col- 


ontst to such a degree that it held up 


its hands in hely horror and announced | 
it ‘thee things continued it would 
be compelled to make revelations which 
would miake the ears of those thut heara4 
them 


tingle Suppose - Mr. ‘Martin joins 


the opposition for of over- 


the 


the purpose 


throwing present administration, 


| what effect. would: such-a course have on 


his political fortunes? Can it be doubt- 


=! 
ne sr ny wine omiieant or the tite OF = 


Mt who hnuve 


Pliced theniseiVes ~ before 
the people ncouver , 


Ate Bd 
Vancouver as candidates 
seeking the votes of the people of that 
eity for “the 


Turner government -and 


that 


its 
Mr. 


predecessors wuch action on 


; 
of his name from the political records | 
of British Cotumbts 
Vancouver Is 


at least as far as 
concerned? But there is | 
little chance of Mr. Martin encompassing 
his 
manner; he may not love his late _¢ 
leagues. ax ardently as David loves: ona] 
than 


political defeat in such an unnatural | 
at 


but he undoubtedly entertains no 
love whatever for the men who have been 
continually maligning his character sinee 
he set foot In British Columbia. There fs 
nothing clearer about Mr Martin's course 
in the House than this—if-Turnertem at- 
tempts to raise its ugly head again he 
will help to keep It down. 
IF DREYFUS WIN 
e —_—o— 

What will happen if Captain Alfred 
Dreyfus be declared innocent of the crime 
with. which he 


is charged? Were he a 


Britt. subject the law would “pardon” 
him for having wrongfully punished“him; 
it might possibly ‘restore to him his rank 
in th army; and it_might even go the 
length of (surreptitiously) granting him 


) areided 


| way 
j mation 
| Martin’s part Would mean the elimination | | Was talk 


Looking tackward many years-it-is tm 
possible to refrain from feeling a certain 
uf bands of 


boys who with lagging footsteps 


amount sympathy for the 
small 
“wend -thelr weary way-te the halis of learn 
tng. But-holidays, Hke everp Ging here be- 
iow, must come to an— end, and pupil and 
white 
to stagger through anoth- 
er term with their thoughts fairly well 
the past and 


next summer. 


teacher to-day again iake up the 


boys’ burden 


between vacation 


the one to come 


wt, tehert,—counsel—for-Capt. Drey lus; 
was shot this morning while on his way 
He Is not 


expected to recove One report states 


that the would-be murderer has been ar- 
Apparently, the end, of this cele- 


j brated case js not vet in wight. tt has 


the 
murders 


"been cause of several 


before 


suicides and 


and Justice triumphs a 


revolution may be considered necessary to 


purify politics in France. 


‘ Britain's latest triumph i& a warship 


that cost one million and a quarter 


pounds sterling, and represents the sum- 


mit of human Ingenuity in naval arc miter | 


ture As a 
has no rival on the 


ity 


sea-boat and @ fighter she 


Waters of the earth. 


WEIRS ON COWICHAN RIVER. 


—o 

Mr. W, W-. Stumbles Investigates 
Gunditions Prevailing on the fav 

orite Fishing Stream, 
o— 

Saturday. morning 
of the Dorm 
wn Mr. Gatbraith--the fisher: 
overerer, went 
river, returning in 
Times reporter this 

s #ald 

“We visited several places where it 
had been represented to. me the fish bad 
heen prevented from RomE tip the river, 

} found where the weirs bad been pat 
in; Wat the hurdles, Gr lattice work, had 
seen removed and there wére then 
obstacles in the way of the fish 
ning up the stream.” T Was informed by 
tl Y guardian’ at Danecans 

” & great many fish in the river 
a present, nd that more have been 
seen than, for many seasons, The Inp- 
diaus use these weirs to delay the as 
cent of the fish and use gaffs, or spea 
to take the fish out of the water, 

“I am of opinion that if a permanent 
open-ng were left to enable the spring 
*eimon- and steel heads to ascend the 
river when they are running it 
answer evegy purpose, -All the 


the 


Us 
Stumbles 


Mr. W. W. 
fre rttaetet 
ies 
the evening.’ To a 
morning Mr, Stum- 


are running; sas the Indians 


y the winter, and they are not con- 

*T Was told before T went up 
humbers of small Gah are caught inthe 
iver i sold by Indians. There was no 
of establishing this from the infor- 


I received, but on the contrary, 


very few fish are taken fir sale. ‘There | 
“a treaty with the Indians whieh al | 
lows them to take the fish for food, .as 
they formerly did, The river . rons! 
through some Indian reserves, and if; 
thelr weirs be destroyed they would, in 
alt” probability, retaliating by refusing | 
+0-permit-fishermen-to-g0-over thelr laud 
from point to point 

Mr, Stumbles leayes. this evening to 
the maivland, where be will visit New 
Westminster, proceeding thenee to Qnes- 
nelle, and will probably return to Vie 
toria before going back to Ottawa. 


United States authorities have been max- 
ing ftnquiries from the British colonjal 
office regarding the government of Brit'sh 
colonies in the Bast, with the supposed 
view of the. possibie adoption of British 
MOTOS Th the Philippines, ‘ 


> DR. A.W. CHASE'S: 


CATARRH CURE... 2G. 


tA W (hese 
Medisine Co., Toronte and Byufalo 


jon Grsheries de-} 


up to the Cowichan! 


20 | 
Ten) Sb and “costs 


+ 
that | 


would} 
hurdles | 
may be placed in. position when the dog | pay -to 
| salmon F 


faniolon ereck 
1 by the officer at Duncans that | 


ferred to the Australian, which carried 
them to Bennett. The’ White Pass train 
was awalting them, and at SkagWay they 
found the Tees ready” for “departure: A 
number of the although none 
could he called :aillionsires, had- gold. It 
we_estiniaied that there waa about 
$75,000 on board the Tees._ 

According to news - brought “by the 
Dawsouians it is possible that the Kioz 
dike has by this time witnessed a triple 
hanging. When they left workmen 
were busy bullding-a senffold at the po 
liee barracks and enclosing the same in 
a tight board feuce, Ou this acaffold is 


ivals, 


Norman Mucauiley, “the principal own.) 
er of the tramway, however, denies this. | 
He is at Dawsor and when asked by} 
the Dawson Miner about the - reported 
sale of the tram to the Canadian De 
yulopment-Co.. Ut soiieJother company. 
Mr. Macauley said that there was no 
foundation for the report; that the tram 
was not for sale. He says that he ts 
doing a good business and that there 
will be a rush of freight in from Skag- 
way until the-river closes: 

Since July the railway company has 
been hauling 170 tons of freight-daily 


ee the tirst-iegat-exeuntion from Skagway to Benhett, and it goes 


the; Yakou territory, when “Henderson; 
the man who-wurdered his partner on 
the Stikine river, in March, 1808, while 
en route to the Kloudike-aed James aud 
Dawson Nanteck, the twb° surviving 
Tagish Indians convicted of the shoot- 
ing of a prospector on the MeClintock 
trait-im the sprieg of INBRcThe date of 
the execution is now fixed at August 
ith, It will remembered that ther: 
were four of Indians convicted 
aid sentenced to death, and the date of 
ution set, The sentence was sus 
pemded on account of legal gnestions 
arising as to the validity of the sentence 
During the winter two of the prisoners 
died of seursy, and if nothing Wappens 
the other twa will hang with Henderson 
on Friday, August 4, 1890. 
Some of the Dawson men, however, 
the news that the hanging would 
probably layed, for when they leit 
the sheriff and executioner was out of 
town and pot expected back until the 
7th.- Nevertheless the work was siill 
going On in thé construction of the scaf 
fold. 

Klondike offitials have. been having 
much trouble With whisky smugglers of 
late, Numerous arrests were being made 
and in man¥ instances. convictions were 
secured. Three tons of stuff which pass- 
ed the Canadian customs officials at the 
Summit of White Pass as “rolled bar 
ley" proved upon investigation at: Daw 
} on to be pure malt and cigars. 

The wares were ‘consigned to the Brit 
jeh-American Brewing Company... Ru 
} dolph Duneanthe toca] manager of the 
pconcern, was summoned before Colonel 
Steele, of the-mounted police, aad fined 
ou’ the .charge ef straz- 
} sling the malt aud assessed a similar fine 
for the ¢igars 

Cigars that.had been smuggled into 
} Dawson under consignment to M, De 
| Forest Yates. hrougtit the latter to grief 
| It was shown ih the conviction, ‘it 's 
said, that he had attempted to bribe 
Constable Smith, whereupon Col, Steele 
j ordered the accused held onder $500 
| bonds, to answer in the territorial couct, 

The DiWeon Miner ¢ August lat 
says: Kighteen” left-limit hillsides have 
heen epened up on Dominion and good 
ated during the paxt month, some 
of them being as far down as in. the 


be 
these 


ox 


give 


be ¢ 


j 


Uses thelr sheple, article of eg | berivet= ard’ titties below tower dis- 


covery, ‘A-latge number of claims hare 


Bidered valuable by the White, pesuile.—. — auds commend work aad ought to-open- 
that 


up well. F 

A #02 nugget ‘was found by Potter & 
Millan, on their hillside claim No, 2 
above lower discovery, left iimit, of Do- 
in fifty —-days'- -rocking 


their clean-up was $2,800, } 


News is given that Chief Engineer P. 
Mathijers on the steamer Ora met With a 
painful accidetit on that boat's Inst trip | 
ap. When just thie side-of Big -Saitmon+ 
he in some way got his hand caught tn 
the machinery, losing his two first fingers | 
wn hia left band, . He was taken ba k 
to Dawyon on the Fiera 
The Dawson police are starting a ern. 
sade against the “tqugh” elément, fn- 
tending to rid the district of them before 
the winter, They are also making an 
‘effort to get the pauper element from be- 
ing “an elephant on their hands,” he 
following notice has just been issned by 
Colonel Steele: 6 
“The publie are hereby warned, hired 
men in particular, that unless they are 
residents, retufning to thelr homes, and 
have taken the necessary Wecleration to 
that effect, they will on. mo account be 
bormitted “te enter..the ¥nkon—territery,-- 
for the purpose of remaining therein, 
without the réquired amount of provis- 
lon’ nnd mony, { 
“Should they wish to pass through to 
Alaska without the aforesaid provisions 
no hindrance will be shown, tut they are 
distinctly cautioned that tn the évent of 
their atempting to atay in the Yukon 


territory, no.aid or asnistance will - be statement he instances Cariboo, where Tolepua 


‘think? 4t~onty~-fatr“+ 


\ there. He returned again.in the course of 


down the-river imniediately ~ upon ar- 
rival in scows. or steamers. the Victoria- | 
Yukon Company are doing a big business 
selling scows. The railway company is 
now arranging to build anow sheds, so 
that they can run in winter. ! 
Mr, Haley, who arrived from Atlin. by 
the Tees, says the wattrhaw now pone + 
down ot the creeks, and the miners are 
doing well, being able.to work to better 
advantage, Mr. Justice Irving has giv- 
en every Satisfaction to the miners by 
his decisions in the cases that have come 
before him at Atlin, 

The Bennett Sun says that $500,000 in 
Atlin gold bas passed through Bennett. 
8. Howe, chief engineer of the steam 
er Tyrrel, and G, Andersoh; of the crew 
of that steamer, were passengers by the 
Tees. They siy that the’ steamer has 
been raised and proceeded to Dawson. 
Both she wnd the Anglian left for the | 

Klondike capital on August Oth. 

©. Bernard and E. G, Miller, of 
Vancouver, were passengers who have 
just bonded 3,000 acres of mineral lend 
at the White Horse. They are interest 
ed in the copper strike made there, and 
they say, that -the property has been 
bonded with a view to commencing de 
velopment work at un early ‘date. ~ They 
say there are 10,000 tons of copper ore 
in sight. | 


WEIRS ON COWICHAN RIVER. 
—_—o— 


To the Editor: For some time now let- | ¥ 


ters have appeared in your valuable pa- 
per respecting the destruction of fish and} 
game, and there can be no doubt that 
such ts the fact. .I did not Intend to say! 
anything about the matter, but I think tt/ 
enly fair to those interested State | 
positive facts that came ynder my ob- 
servation. ‘On the 16th of July (Sunday) 
two friends and myself went up the river | 
some way above Duncan and reached the | 
spot we. intended to start fishing at | 
about 5:50 a.m, The first thing we saw 
was a .weir--closed and a few minutes | 
later ‘an Indian came dowl in a hurry | 
with only his shirt on to open-the weir. I 
am quite sure he would have ‘kept 
closed if we had fot been there. I did | 
not think very much about that, but! 
higher up the river around some of the 
Oeep.podle..we- saw-wrnitikible sfens 
of netting, and Of a rpck hy-one of these | 
pocia we found part; of a torn net. I 
make these tere} 
known and let Mr, Lomas know that-he| 
has .yet something to learn about the 
fishing business, and perhaps he will have | 
the good sense not to consider every one 
“cranks” but himself, Yours respectfully, | 
' E.-M'DOUGALL. | 
Victoria West, August 12. 


to 


GOLD FOR A CENTURY. 


—_o— 
A Returned Klondiker With -Pienty- of 
Hope. 


—J,3--Croft_and John Murdoch were pas- 
sengers on the Tees’ for the North on 
Saturday night and spent yesterday. at’ 
their old quarters at the Occidental, The 
fatter- went into Klondike In 1888, and 
Pprospected with fir success on thd Forty 
Mile, but with no thought of the imniense 
deposits which ‘have since been found 


@ year and thought he had conquered the 


| disease. it 


it |” 


JULIUS ‘WEST, General Scivenger. succes. 
sor to John Dougherty—Yards and cead- 
is cleaned; coatracts made for remov 
Dg earth; “etc All orders left with 
James,Fell & Co., Fort street. rocers; 
— eee corner Yates and Doag- 
streets, w be -promptiy attended 
Residence, 60 —Van-ouver  strect. Tae 


STILL. HOLDING OUT, 


—o— 
Offices: of the” Anti-Semite - league im 
Paris Besieged by-—P lice, 


ay casociatea Pree 

Paris, Aug. 14—The offices of the An- 
ti-Semi League, in which M, -iveria, 
president of the League, and Max Ke 
gis, a noted Jew-baiter and ex-mayor of 
Algiers, sought refuge from arrest on 
Saturday, are still besieged: ‘Ther were 
guarded throughout the night. by a-force 
‘of _police-armed-with revotvers. MP Guer- 
in, -his- friends declare, if attacked, will 
fire on the troops. After attempting ‘to 
galn them to their side, the besiered men 
threatened to pour oil ou the besiegers. 


RIA. 


TWO ANS w= 94ND 93 
Walter L.: 
_ Main 
‘Ring Circus 


Don’t Waste Your Money on 
Worthless Catarrh Cuses. 


dopanese Golam Cire Cures 


AND 18 THE 
ONLY GUARANTEED CURZ, 


The proprietors of Japanese Catarrh Cure 

r ‘ving many letters of gratt- 

tode from the caturrh-affiicted In all parts 
of Canada. During December and Januaty 
we sent out over three -thousand free 
sample boxes, and in 90 per cent: of the 
vases the peepee tell as that even the 
sniail sample has dowe them more good 
than many dollars’ worth of* so-called 
eores. Japancee Catarrh Cure fa the result 
of & prescription perfected by years of ex 
perimental stady, by one of America’s 
most. suecessful specialists in treating this 
is «A Ppomade prepared from 
stulniess compounds of Iodine and Easen- 
tial or VolatHe olla, The natural heat of 
the body melts It, and the very act of 
breathing carries It to the diseas4 ‘parts; 
it reaches every diseased portion from the 
orifice of the nose to the innermost re 
ieee of the widdie ear, Curing Tnvarr 
obly all forms of ecatarrh of the nose and 
throat, and ali forms of catarrhal deat. 


MASMOTH MENAGERIE. 


ROMAN HIPPODROME. 
CHILDREN’S MENAGERIE. 


Deen of Rae’ Rug 


NATIVE CUBAN BAND. 
MORSEBACK RIDING PONY. 


| ness, 


Japanese Catarrh Cure Js guaranteed to 
cure. ang case of catarrh, or mone 
furded. Sok by: all druggists. Price, 
crbte; six bitths with guarantee to cure, 

%). A free sample sent to any addrers 
Address, The Grit- 
Macpherson Co., 121 Chureh 

140 


Naclose 5 cent stamp, 
fths and 
street, Toront 


l 63 Horses °*3;" One Man. 


rs 


TIME TABLE 34, 


NORTH BOUND, 


D'ly 

am. 
=T07 

#28 
10:14 
10:48 


Kersiake’s Troop of Trained Pigs 


And Many Other New and Novel Features, 
Strictly Higt-Class. 


Grand Street. Parade 


5 p.m. Tuesday, Auguct 22, : 
Night performance only August 22. 

“} Afternoon perfermanoe only August-23, 

- Teéketa ou sale day of show at 0. Be 


Excyrsion tickets on sale to and from | ORMOND’S Book Store, 92-Government 
all paints Un Saturdays and Sundays. street. 
The following rates are ia effect on Sun- {| —~— 


cad avoy Theatre 


Goldstream 


Children under 12 years....25c, witacbuises Gels cx 


bt eter ee ey TTT 

Ar, Goldstream . 
ar. Shawnigan .Lake.. 
Ar. Duncans . 
Ar_ Nanaimo... 


H MONSTER AGGREGATION OF TALENT 
-_ Fr 

Overwhelmed with praises and popularity 

by every intelligent citizen of Victorta. re 


Children under 12 years....40c. 


restless spirit which hitherto had impelled 
him to search for gold. 

Phe discovery- of -geld.in large quantities 
in i897 awakened the old fever in him 
and he. wentto..with.the first dei 

He had phenomenally good 
luck and for somie time after he started 
washing was taking out $80 a day. 

Mr. Murdoch pfophesies’ that Klondike | 
will be a gold producing district of ‘the 
first maghitude for fifty years yét and 
that Dawson will be a big city for an 
even longer period. In vindication of his 


Duncan’s 
$1.00 


Children under 12 years.:. 50c. 


LAGROSSE _ 


=< 


THE NELSON LACROSSE TEAM 


WILL PLAY THE 3 
J. B. A. A. Lacrosse Team y 

———= se a 

VETERINARY. . 

8 F. TOLMIB, Veter Tuesday, the 15th Inst. 

a’ 


—On— 
Bray's livery, 100” doen street, | At Caledonia Grounds, Gatie to commence 
ne *182; residence. telephone 417. | at 4:30 aharp . 


For rates and all information apply at 
company's offices. 
A. DUNSMUTR, 

President. 


G@bo. L. COURTNEY, 
Trafic Manager. 


t 
u 
y 

= 
} 


49 


= 


= 
» 


? 


Skirt Supporter 
_ For Women, 


Physiclags recom; 


mend them Call aw 
examine. 


Xe. Hn. BOWES, CHEMIST, 


A 


! owe 


the annual 


“harm may have 


100 Government. street. 


No. 
. We Dispense. Prescriptions, 


jo > WRATRDR BULLETIN, 


-_oO— 
Daily Report Furnished by the Victoria 
Meteorological Department, 


+” 
Victoria, Ai. 14.%a. m.—Since Satur 
day an 
moved in from the Pacific. It now covers 
this province and the adjoining states, 
where {i le éausiig general. showers 
conditions whl continue antl. the 
bigh area now off California moves 
Rain is falling ta Alberta; 


Ontario the weather 


present 
Tactiic 
northward. 
frm this eastwanl te 
ix One. 
Victorian 
miniwun, 
0; weethe 
Westminster 
temperature, misimom, 
miles RK. rain, 12; weather, 
paling Wind, N. W.; 
mioops— Barometer, 
‘; minimum, 
weather, cloudy 
Wash.—Baroweter; 
minimem, 50; 
weather, rain. 
Oregon—Rarometer, 
migimum, 00; wind, 
1d; weather crondy 
wi — Daron 2.58; temperature, 
winimam, 52; whad, 8; 
DS; weatler, rala. 
kin FPrnctace 
perature, 8; 
We: 


2.80; 


temperature, 
3 W 


~Barometer, 
52; wind. 
"loudy 
Batometer, 
bs whi, 5 
ty 

weather, 
28.78; 


uy miles 
rain, 
New 20.78 


Hoag 


, cloudy. 
K 


ture, rain, 


wind, calm? 
AI; 
Neah, 
tires 54; 
rain, .20, 
Portland 
perature, 
E.; rain, 


29.54; tempera 


wind, 6 miles 3.W 


25.92; 
52 
52; 
r 
3 miles 


tem 
14 miles 


Tar meter, 20.98; 


minimum, 6; wind, 
clear. 

Forecasts. 

Vor 26 bhuurs ending 5 p.m, Tuesday 

Vistoria.andldalise-Eresh.ta_sirong.3. 
end S. W. winds, unsettled and with 
showers. 

Lewer Mainland—Freeh fo siveag easter- 

rly winds, ol amt showe 


weather, 


cool, 


—_—o— 
+MAYPOLE —-SOAP 
Drug Store, 3) Douglas St. 
3 —o-— 
—Telly Glasses, . Fruit 
ing Kettles, etc, at R. 
Co.'s, 80. Douglas street. 

= —o—- x 
—No. 3 Company, Fifth Regiment, holds 
business meeting of the As+ 
sociation at 8 o'clock this evening at the 
Driti_ Hall; 


at- Jackson's 


Jars, Preserv- 


pater Li 

—Get your “> fixea-up by 
old reliable firm; Onions & Plimley, 
only practieal-bicycle makers in. city; 
and 44 Broad street. 


,_ the 
the 


cles 


—o— 
—The Good Templars’-excursion to 8e- 
attle returned on the City of Nanaimo at 
5 o'clock yesterday morning, those on 
board having theroughix enjoyed them- 
selves. The street cars met the returning 
Pleasure seekers ana conveyed ‘those who 
reside in the suburbs to their homes. 
==Om= 

For preserving season Erskine, Wall 
& Co. import by each steamer Peaches, 
Apricots, etc., fresh, at lowest prices. 


* Pull line of Fruit Jars in stock. 


amnesia’ 
—An Ottawa despatch of the 12th con 
tains the folowing: Militia genera! orders 
say: “British Columbia reghment, First 
Battalioi—that part of genera) order 34 
of April,.1899, re transfer of Captain A. 
Martin from Tenth Battalion’ to this 
corps, is. cancelled. “To be second 
tenant provisionally, A. Martin, gentle 
man; tate captain Tenth Battalion Royal 
Grenadlers ra, 30th March, 15890." 


—o 

—Rev. Eugene Brooks returned to the 
city on Saturday evening and called upon 
the chief of police to ask If there was a 
warrant ‘out for his arrest. Chief Shep- 
pard informed him that up to ‘that time 
none had been issued, although he did 
not know™how soon there might be one. 
Mr. Brooks this morning expressed him- 
self to a Times reporter as determined to 


thave the charges made against him tn- | 


vestigated and Dis side made known 

~The funeral of the late 
Gilchrist took placé# yesterday afternoon 
from Hayward's undertaking parlors, the 
service being conducted by Rev.-Br. Wil- 
gon and Rev. D. MacKae. The remain 
were borne to the grave by Mesers. L. 
‘Tait, J. Atkins, C. W. Jenkinson, J 
Nankeville, R. J. Styles and L. Rutter 
Avvery sad feature of the death of Mrs 
Gilchrist “ts the effect the lowes hae hed 
upon the Bereaved husband, who has dis 
appeared since Saturday morning, A 
thorough search has been conducted, so 
far with ‘no success, and it is feared some 
perinen iim" Por™ the 
inst day or two, since death robbed him 
Of his wife, he has expressed himself. in. 
a way to catise his friends the keenest 
and ‘the last seen of him he was 
oeoing In the direction of Macaulay Potnt 


-ANew Policy 


BY AW 


OMpany 


"That OLD RELIABLE COM- 

* PANY, The Ontario Matual Life, 
has just issneda NEW POLICY 
containing SPECIAL AD- 
VANTAGES not offered by any 
other company Ae 


Don’t Failto Look it Up 


“arr.? R. L, DRURY, 


PROVINCIAL ALA MAGEE. 
34 BROAD STREET. 


Mrs. Marion 


ortent low baremeter aren has | 


The} 


* ) thelr 


tompera-, 


téfu-'} 
j 
5 miles 


rain, | 


Browa &! 
me 


sieu- 


Blue Ribbon _Plavortois 


=APLOL AND D STEE EEL, pills at dng k- 


son's Drug Store, 05 Douglas St. 
7 --O-- 
—Lawh mowers atid garden tool in 
variety at Kh. A, Brown _ & Co.'s, 4 
ae treet. 


~ etre “executinw ot the” Lorat Connect! ot* 


Women is- meeting in the City Hall thie 
afternoon as the Time’ goes to press, | 
| 


—few 

—Tne committee having in charge the; 
arrangement of the’ Fitth Regiment pic- 
nic will meet this afternoon at 5 o'clock 
in Col. Gregory's office. 


—Oamping outf at Weiler Bros, it | 


will be worth your. while to. juspect oe | 
Gold Medal camp furniture and axat 
epoking utensils. 


evening go to Sidney | 
zattraction, . champion 

Merrsfield; round trip 

§ p.m. rd 
—o— 

For preserving season Erskine, Wall 
& Co, import by each steamer Peaches, 
) Apricots, etc., fresh, at lowest prices. 
| Pull line of Fruit Jars in stock. 

onion 
persistent advertisers, ~the | 
world over, are those who beileve in 
goods, That is why you hear #0 
jmuch of “HONDI" Ceylon Tea. It is all 
j that ts claimed for It. ° 


—On Tuesday 
extra 
k rider, Mr. C 
train lenyes 


She: 


—The most 


Oe 
|* —The White Pass & Yukon Railway 
| Company are now running three trains 
a day between Skagway and Bennett,-The~ 
trip occupies four and @ quarter hours, 

| inclusive of sixteen ‘stops. 

_—oO 
Gallih city 
} K. Strachan, city ork, 
in the city and will interview the pro 
vincial government on several matters 
Hor tnrerest po the people of the Kootenay 
téwa. 


solicitor, and J. 
of Nelson, are 


—W. A, 


Vancouver Exicampment, No, 1, 1 
6. ett temo night One 
brother will be admitted to the patri 
j orehal degree, and— a communication 
| from the ‘societies? reunion committee 
| will be dealt with } 
} ES 
Inthe city. police court this mornings 
Magistrate Hall fined. James Fleming, 
} a drunk, $2.50,-and-an-offender-against- 
‘the bicycle by-taw $2.50; - Argument ja 
thé Craigttower road sidewalk — case 
lagalnst Adams Wie Contiided: 


—The petition asking the ‘City Coun¢il 
to submit a by-law: to the ratepayers en- 
doraing the proposal to bonus the ferry 
i to Pert Angeles. is- being -numerously- sign 
ed and it is believed the number | 


of signatories will be secured. 


requisite 


| —Thtere was a good attendance at the’ 
| Oak Bay open alr concert on Saturday! 
| evening, and, contrary to expectation, the 
j evening was delightful: -Yesterday two 
} or three hundred went out to Goldstream,+ 
| where the tund gave another enjoyable 
rt. Keeping up their record for 
work, the band went down to Esquimalt 
this afternoon to the arriving 
flagship. 


conc 


welcome 


that this evening's 


= 
—It is just possible 
meeting of the City Council will be a lene 
one, as the committee appointed to re- 
hport on the proposed subsidy to the €.P. 
N. Co. to enable them to establish better 
| connection with the Mainiand, may have 
concluded their labors and will turn 
their report. If they: do there wil) almost 
certainly be @ long debate upon the ques 
tion. Beyond this, there is litle business 
of general interest. | pe 
excursionists came 
bour yes 
Skoo 


bundred 
at an early 
the big. barge 
landed at the outer 
wharf aboot 6 a.m id although the 
street had been running out there 
to meet the City of Nanaimo, returning 
from Seattle, there were.no cars there 
meet the strangers, who had walk 
into town in the rain. The visitors dis 
persed all over the-city, and took in the 
sights, returning home in the afternoon. 
e —_o— 

tubt. Iaffray, managing director of 
Toronto Gle accompanied by Ma 
Pelatt, of Toronto, returned, to 
to-day dfter an extended trip 
Boundary creek country, in 
have targe interests both io- 

pmbers of syndicates 
Their present trip em- 
Boundary district of 
British Columbia, but also Republic 
camp. Both are delightful with the 
country and regard the putiook as most 
promising, 


—Several 
over from Seattle 
terday morning. on 
kum. They were 


cars 


to 


the 
jor 
Victoria 
through the 
which they 
dividually and as 
| they represent 

t ed not only the 


———— 

—At the Jubilee Hospital on Saturday 
there passed away one of the best known 
hotel men. of -Victoria, Edmund Walker 
Spencer, for some years proprietor of the 
Garrack's Mead, Bastion street, and late- 
ly employed at the Occidental hotel. Mr 
Spencer was 49 years of age, and a native 
of Lincolnshire, England. He had been 
il but a very short time and the an- 
nouncement of his death came as a great 
surprise to most of those who knew. bim., 
An ardent sportsman..and all round good 
| fellow, Mr. Spencer bad many friends, by 
whom the funeral arrangements will he 
attended to. _The interment takes place 
to-morrow afternoon from Hayward'’s un- 
dertaking parlors. 

—— 

audience was present at the 
Brotherbood ieeting Jast-} 
ut Which the proceedings were | 
moat. interesting. A good programme of | 
|muxie was given, and the address by | 
| one of the members om *“Humanity’s Op 
portunity,” brought out many points 
| which the Universal Brotherhood claim | 
to be of vital importance to a better un- | 
| derstanding of one's true purpose in hfe, 
{The speaker held that men were divine 
beings, that everything In fature” was 
divine, awd the true parpose of existence 
was to realize this divinity In the lifé) 
of humanity, Brotherhood would then 
| become a fact ini nature and jf required 
this touch Gf soul sympathy to bring 
about the unity of aii mankiad;* Quees- 
tions were asked by the audience and 
answered |by the members, -and other 
} points clearly brought out, the public ap- 
| preciating the opportunity to gain a bet- 
ter woderstanding of the teachings pro- 
claimed. . The Universal Brotherhood is 
wgaiining many friends in the city and oll 
aver the country, its humanitarian | 
work offering opportomities to all to| 
strive for the realization of Universat} 
Brotherbood. i 


—A large 
Universal 
evening, 


f =o 
~Real palms paeerved fn. natural 
state by chemical solution for decorative 
purposes, Weiler Bros, display a* nice | 
line of these unexpected goods, 3 


Qos 
—Lipton's teas at Hardress Clarke’s. *. 


| Victorians ‘Welcome Her Return | 


| bund playing and colors 


| August 1, 


Card; 


tn 


\ Yictoria_to.Philadelphia and, return _ac- 


VICTORIA DAILY, TIMES, MONDAY, .. AvausT 14, 1899, 


= The Warkpite Ii 
_ Back out: 


The New Flagship. Reaches! 
‘Esquimalt With Rear-Admir- 
al Beaumont. 


to the North Pacific Naval 
‘Station ~~ 


H. M. 8. Warspite, the flagship of 
Rear Admiral, L, A, Beaumont, was 
steaming inte Esquimalt. barber with her 
flying -as the | 
Times went to press this afternoon. - 

The Warepite has on board, besides! 
the staff of Officers, 541 men who joined | 
the flagship from the Medway Naval 


; Depot ‘and Portsmouth and Chatham, 


the latter depot furnishing the marines. 
The new rear-admiral, who came on 
the W arspite to take command of the 
Esquimalt sation ia the place of Hear- | 
Admiral Palliser, has a distinguished 
service record. As livutenant he served | 
in the Agetic expedition of 1875-6, for 
which he received the Aretic medal and | 
was clocted as Fellow of the Royal Geo) 
xreplieat Seciety, tHe was promoted - 
captain on June 30, 1882, and a month | 
later was appointed nayal attache for 
Kuroge. In December of the same year 
he Was appoluted secretary to Lord 
Northbrooke, fifst lord 6f the admiralty, 
and: served in that. capacity: for’ three 
years, proceeding with Lord Northbrodke 
on bis ieion to Beypt i Ts" Ons 
1801," he was promoted com 
mander of the second Cass and frew 
{hat_time. until. June..1,. 180d, command- 
ead the naryal squadron. He was ap- 
pointed. director of naval intelligences in 
August, IS04; and A, TD, C. to the Queen’ 
do January 1, 1895, and was promoted 
rear-ndmiral op August 23, 1807. 
Aniong-otber officers on the new flag- 
whip tres Capt. “T. -P,” Walker,” Fig 
Livutenant B, A. dratt-Barlow,. Chap- 
lain HL. 8, Wausbrough, BA., Paymasicr | 
Hi, H, Share, Naval Instructer-—8,- #>+ 


Before leaving England the Warapite 
was in the dockyards for eight. months 
undtrgeing repairs, both of hull and ma 
chinery, and ‘was completed for active | 
service con March. 23th. - Her -reit. east? 
nearly £26,000; --bat- this—sum inehudes 
the cost of fitting her with a new arma 
ment of ten six-inch modera quick firing 
guns in the ‘place of her old weapons | 
of the same calibre, thus making her 
more efficient as a warship than whea 
she was completed” for’ sea in 188%} 

Capt. T. P. Watker, who is flag cap- 
tala” ofthe Warspite, is known “in th 
navy lithor of “Seamanship Ex 
aming Questions of the ~ Training 
1801," and the editor of Capt. 
“Seamanship,” and eu- 
He was promoted to lieutenant 
from the Royal yacht, and doubtless, 
owes his present appdiptment to’ his hav- 
ing been employed for some time-as a 
in the Neval 
under Rear-Admiral 


us the 
jon 


6 revised 


Intelligence | 
Beau 


commander 
Department, 
mout 

There was 
Warspite on: her 
the Pitth Regiment 
demonstration, 


» big crowd to welcome the | 
return to this station, 


band. leading tbe 


—There was. quite a demonstration this 
afternoon tn Chingtewn and ordinary peo- 
ple were treated to an Ulustration of how | 
the children of the Flowery kingdom dis- 
of their dead. Mrs, Wee San, who 
New Westminster, of Chi- 
died a day or two ago and 
her remains are to be sent to China. To-| 
day the formality « onveying the body 
out to Ross Bay cemetery and back again 
was performed as a preliminary, and it! 
was made the occasion of the usual ex-/ 
travagances In the manner dear to the! 
Celestial. The deceased: leaves. five chil- 
dren. 4 


rose 
was born in 


nese parents, 


conducted -the -ser- 
vices yesterday afternoon In connection | 
with the funeral’ of the late Mra. J. ‘I 
Pierre, which took place from the fam-| 
ily residence, St, ouis street. ‘There 
was a Jorge attendance-and many beauti- | 
fai floral tributes of esteem The pall 
bearers Barnsewell, Alex- 
ander, ¢ Spotts and Clay 
ton. 


Iter. Mr. Speer 


were Messrs. 


‘arter Monter 


NOTES FROOM VANCOUVER 
—g— 
(Speciat-to the Times.) 

Vancouver, Avg i4.—D. G, Catheart, 
late of Reveletoke, wae arrested this 
morning. -He has been here since August | 
tth. Yesterday, it ts alleged, he ralsed 
various sums of money aggregating ov er) 
$100 from merchants and others on: his 
cheques, One man became suspicious of 
the cheque and had him watched till the 
bank opened, with the result that Cath- | 
cart was arrested.on board tlie Seattle | 
train, A charge of .obtaining money. by | 
false preténces will be brought against | 
him-“in the police court this afternoon, 

Dr. Mupro, who has been In Atlin for 
some months, has returned to Vancou- 
ver to stay. He will visit his mother, 
who is seriously U) at Winnipeg 

Goo. Mages, a Luli Island farmer and 
an old ploneer of British Columbia, was 
thrown from his horse this morning on 
Hastings street'and badly hurt. He ig in 
the hospital 4 


| 
} 
} 
| 
| 
j 


CHEAP RATES. 


1 » =o 
The Northern Pacific 
pany has made a low 


. 


Railway Com 
rate of $88.85, 


| count, G, A. R. Encampment. Tickets 
on sale August 29th and 30th; good to 
return O&¢tober 3st. 


K. E. BLACK WWOOD, Agent, 


I Peaches 


Bicamer Queen 
o'clock this morning from Naas and way 


porte 


>t ee 


Peacites Cheap 


Peaches for 


THIS WEEK NLY at 


a) 00 sat i 


Leave your order before they 
are all gold. 


JOUNS BROS. 


259 DOUGLAS ST. 
eBVeeeeeesese 


Call. 


CHIPPING. NEWS + 


HArrenines OF A Day ALona 
THE WATERFRONT, 


—_— 


City returned at 6 


of northern British Columbia, 


bringing a number of passengers and an 


average cargo, 


or 


canneries all had nearly 
| packs, although some-Were still fishing. 
‘The. packs at 


ineluding about 2,000 cases 
When she Weft thé northern 
completed their 


salmon. 


the +arious eannertes an 


per list prepared by Purser Harman, were 


“a8 fotiowse;—— Mitt 
2 harbor, 10,000, Inverness, 15,500, 
)elfie, 
Cannery, 
ard, 7,000; 
5 500; 
Vancouver Packing Co., 
| wick, 
ness, North Pacific 


} 


Bay 7.00 -cnses — Nate 
North Pac 
Iv: “Cinninghant?, io; B.A 
17,000; Good Hope, 1,500; Stand- 
Lowe Inlet, 9,20; Wadham’s, 
6,000; Wannock’'s, 5; 
10,005; Bruns- 
and Alert Bay, 1,500, Inver- 
Wanthock’s, Vancou 


Narmu, 


10,50, 


yer P,.Co,and Brunswick-canneries had 


completed their packs. 
still fahing. 
bby 


of 


oner, 
| Ming 
Delayney. 


The others’ were 
The. passengers who arrived 
the Queen City were Constable Flewitn 
Port Essington, with an Indian pris- 
Mrs. Flewin, J. Murray, J. Spears 
Clark, Mies Young, CC. Wills, C. 
H._ Hornbrook, H. Cookson, J. 


Barber; Miss Frenter, A A OnVvEr: © EB 


Musgrave; 
Murray, 
MeKinhon, 
w 
Mr, 
Nicholson 
and 8. A. Spencer. 
ese, 


Indian prisoner 


R 
Mr. 
dD. 
iiiiams, Miss 
and Mra. Willie 
Mr. and 


,—irving._D.—Smith. W 
and Mra. Turnbull, Mra,’ 
MéePhee, W. Hanley, P 
Nicholson, C. J. Read 
R. J. Oliver, H 
Mre. Hall; J. Nobie 
There were 6¢ Japan- 
Chinese and Indign, fishermen. The 
= brought by Constable | 


Flewin comes down to spend 12 months 


in 


for 


received at Easington 
an Assyrian. peddier, 


a& sentence 
assault on 


jall 
an 


said to be connected with the ivcal firm 


ot 


sell 
dian endeavored to steal it. 
| raised a disturbance 
ret 
setzing a 
struck sim across the 

| nose.and. cutting deep 
cheeks. 
ed 
ment 


Rahy Bros. The Assyrian wanted to 
the Stick Indian a ring and the In- 
The Assyrian 
in endeavoring to 
the jewelferp’" tnd the Indian 
club made from broken 
face, breaking his 
gashea in. his 
at once arrest- 
year’s imprison- 
will salt North 


back 


a oar 


The Indian was 
and sentenced to a 
The Queen City 


again on Wednesday evening 


Steamer City of Seattle 
noon 


pe 


visited 


po 


sengersa were 
sionists, 
went 
Presbyterian 


rts, 


reached port at | 
with 28 passenker§ from Alaskan 
Sitka 


North 


and 
Her pas 
most part excur: 
and Baptists who 
auspices the 
of Washington 


the glacters, 
ints of interest in the 
for the 
Presbyterians 
North under the 
Synod 


There were, however, a number of miners 


on board, 
fingent from Atijn 
the 
Brucker, 


some from Dawson and a con- 
Among’ those from} 
British Columbia foldhields wus A. 
of Oly tifpia. 


torians and in his opinion things will “be 


lively here when the miners come out. 
says that 
much work is being done, 
able gold is being taken out. 
perty 
| Pine 


He 
season was apened 
and consider- 
On the pro- 
known as the Caledonia group on 
Discovery claim, 


since the 


creek, opposite 


staffs of ten men aré kept busy night and 


day 
this property 
; the 

little 
lars, 


in a wee 


ouiput, for during the close season 


work was done. Two million dol 
however, will be far below 
Mr. Brucker saw 


rk nuggets 


out of Pine creek properties which were 


of some size, 
other tipped the scale at 8 ounces. 
city 
some time ‘before 


one was Worth $28)-and an- 
The 
left - Skagway. 
her news is 


having 
the Tees, 


of Beattie, 


not 39,1ate as that brought by the C.P.N 
liner, 


Steamer: Cottage City arrived from the 


Sound at 6:30 a.m 
| fore 9 o‘elock for Alaskan ports. 
crowded with 
slonists....Ameong those..whoembarked 


and salled shortly be- 
She was 
exour- 


passengers, mostly 


here were Capt, John Irving, who is re- 


turning 


to Atiin! William Wilson, who 


accompanies the captain for a trip; Prof. 
Gage, wife and party; and. seyen Bleters 


of 


convent at Juneau and 
son hospitals. 
M. 
son, EB. 
Wood, 


some.of whom-go to join the 
some for the Daw- 


Mercy, 


Others passengers 
db. Po Wat- 
Body, W. B. 
Ironmonger, 


Moss, wife and child, W. 
Langworthy, A. C. 
Miss C. Wood, A» 


Rev: H. L. Morehouse, Mra. Tves,-Mra. 


MeKer, 
White.” 


ann, C, W. and Mrs, 
“D. Wallate wat Gi” The 


H.. Be 
“Gap. 


bridge, he and the other oMcers of the 
steamer Queen having been ‘transferred 


} to the Cottage City. 


The Queen will be 


JUSTE vee 


LIME JUICE, Rose's. 
CANDY and GHOCOLATE 


If: 
| 
! 
| BISCUITS, Christie's. 
| 


Old Post Office 


APPLE. 


~ 


LOBSTERS, New Pack Clover Leaf. 


HAMS and BACON, Queen Brand. 


Roasted Peanuts, per th... . 

Broken Candy, per tb..... . 

Chocotate Cream Wataut “. 
Peanut, per 1B, ... 20¢ 

__20 ts. Granulated Sugar for $1.00 

Oregon Peaches, the best, box, 1.00 


Hardress Clarke, 


Government St. 


She left Skagway a week ago and j ing phe 
other | 


j 


‘He days that the | 
| Cutput of Atitn will be # surprise to Vic- 


4.000 was taken out of | 
Tt is dificult.to estimate |; 


the | 
taken | 


were | 


prepared for the. Victoria-San_ Francisco 


route on which she te-te-be-pot tn the 


stead of the steamer City of Puebla. 
According to. hews received trom _Da: 


non by the Tees, Deputy Sheriff Carter’ is! 


having a peck of trouble over the steam- 
ey Reindeer, The Dawson Miner faye, it 
how’ Gevelaps that thers is 3. mbrtgage. 
$11,000-recorted wgnInst Ihe boat” bexlaew Ww 
Judgment of 93,20, réndered In Victoria, 
_B.C., which’ is a erm BE. M. Sullivan, 
who- purchased the Reindeer at sheriff's 
sale on the 0th, refuses to take the boat 
with the Mons, and she is again Inthe 
hands of tte sheriff. 


‘Chat the New Vancouver Céal Company 
has vacilities to load steamers is shown 
by the-fact that during five days inst 
week the cosynpany loaded four steamers, 
aggregating 18,500 tons, or an average of 
3,700. tons a day. The colilers loaded were 
thie steamers Titania, San Mateo, Mineola 
and Robert Adamson. Capt. Morgan of 
the Robert Adamson said he was given 
quicker dispatch by the New Vancouver 
Coal Company than he had ever exper- 
fenced elther on the coast of England or 
Wales, or elaewhere. In fact, he said; he 
believed it was quicker dispatch than 
siren in any other part of the world. 


Steamer, Boscowltz arrived from Naas 
end northern British Columbian — ports 
yesterday, bringing down a latge num- 
ber of fishermen and about 2,000 cases of 
salmon. She landed 25 cases fof Simon 
Leiser and #0 for R. P. Rithet at this 
port. The remainder were landed at 
Vanwsuver, She wilt sall North again 
to-morrow evening. 


Steamer Oscar reached 
Gay, She loaded a cargo'of clay there 
and’ ia expectéd—here this evening, She 
will go to Tacoma on Wednesday with a 
cargo of ore. 


Unfon yester- 


‘The wharves of the inner harbor tookedt 
busy this morning, for excepting the 
-¥otemite and Princess Leulse,alltheC, 
EN. vessels were in. port. 

— 
Yosemite left Vancouver at 
connected with the train 


Steamer 
1:4 pm. and 
from the East 

Steamer Tees will il for Bkagway and 
Lyna Canal ports—to-morrow evening. 


Steamer” Wilinpa: witt eatttor-Ahousett, 
and West..Coast ports to-night. 


The thred experted ‘salting #hips have 
not yet arrived, 


P. horns. 
A. 
Driard. 
Jas. Janicson, 
Quern's. 
K. Meeker, 
thi Oriental. 
4-H, Ontrer-and-wite 
‘at the Driard 

4. K, Strachan ahd wife, 
at the Dtentnion 

Alfred Herbert 
ed-at the Queen's 

Major H. M. Petlatt 
gvest at the Driard, 
EG. MePhillipe, 
guest at th Driard. 
we « whl, Q. © 
eter, is at the Driard 
~Wweia wife 


of Calgary, is at the 
MacNeill, of Rossland, 


Driard, 


is at. the 


of Chematnus,. is at ile 


of Puyallup, Wash. Isat 


of Winnipeg, 14 


of Nelson, are 


of Winnipeg, is register 


of Tervito, 


of Vancouver, a 


a. of New Westmin 


Oarlyle and mald, of Ross 


« 


d, are at the Driard, 
A. Nenwick, of the 
ending’ a vacation iu the 
13] and- Rovert 
Toronte. registered at the Driard. 
Je., af Quebec, is viett 
und is aPHotel Victoria 
RB. Lester, of the provincial 
Westininster, Ie st Hotel Victoria 
Robert Jaffray, of Toronto, has re 
from the Malittd, and ia at the Driard. 
Harry Smith, manager of the 
nilhe Mount Sicker, at Hotel 
turks 
Wm, K 
inenrn nee 
Engtapd. 
Db, R. Ker 
the homeceming 
Inti ndér 
Joseph 
j over from 


had 
Nelson 
city 

Gtimedr, 


Tribane 
Palmer of 

are 
H. Gowen, 
Weat 


R. 


bw 


police 
» 


tarned 


Lenora 
at Is Vie 
and 
New 


Leighton, the real 
of Nanaimo, 


estate 


man is at the 


and R, Jameson were among 


Victorians on yesterday's 


M. 


on 


Martin, Q@: © Pr. PP. came 


Vancouver 


yesterday's 
Islauder. 

Kev. W 
registered 
ninion hotel 

ivi. Alex, Henderson, attorney-generat, 
Wis a pastenger from Vanwouver on réester 
day's Islaades. 7 

A, Wo Metton;-of Portland, was-a passeu 
ger on the Utopla Saturday night and | 
at the Queen's. 

Hane “Helgesen, 
morning's lteldnder 
te Cartboo, 

A,. Donaldson, representin 
ckatony Cigar Company of Montreal, 
' Hotel Victoria, 

Miss Watson, of-the High s#ehiool teach- 
ing staff, returned last night from spénd- 
ing her vacation In Montreal, 

4 Fiewin and wi of Port Simpson. 
cime G0wt G8 thé Queen this niorning, ond 
ure staying tthe. New. Ruglaad. - 

The Nelson lacromee team arrived in town 
‘ast night under the management of Harry 
WYRE HT WE at rere Viera. 

43. K. Melaughiin ts a guest at Hotel 
Vietorta. He te a well known biscuit 
ninufacturer of Owen Sound, Ontarto, 

H. G,. Struve and Charles PB, Peabody, 
manuger-of the Alaska &-S: Oo. of Seat- 
the. togietered at the Driard this morning, 

PF. M. Phillips, of Attin City, and N. 
MeArthur, of Bennett Lake, are among the 
returned, Northerners who are at the Ort- 
ental. 

H. Nichotion, A.W, Oliver, H.C. Cook: 
son, David Smith ond ©. J. Reid, of Rivers 
lnlet and Skeena: River, are at the Occt 
dental. 

c. WH. Hate shine and J, J. Ryan, commer. 
celal men of Torento and Montren! respec 
tively, are temporarily quartered at Plotel 
Victoria, 

Kk, Chapmen, of Page Ponsford Bros., 
Vancouver, with his wife nod daughter, 
ls at the Dominlon. They are spending a 
vacation tn the ety. 

Mra. Taylor. of the Spring Ridge echool, 
has been detotriéd at New Weatminater by 
the Ulnces of her mother, Her work Is 
Welig taken by pupil teachers, 

J, Collins, BP. Dayle. Q, C,, Te Gi, Molt, 
a& M. Robertson, D, 8, Walibeidge,,.W. TH. 
Smersen-and- Capt, RG. Tatlow, are Van- 
couver vieltom regiatered. at the Drtard. 

Mra. Joffrey, of Totonto, Inspector of the 
Indian schools of the Presbyxertan mle 
Wop, and Mra, Mefaren, prhaetpat ef ite 
Indian school at Hirtle, Man), are at the 


Dominion. 
Mra, Avis M, Winter bad Mrs, Geo. I. 


Porter, of Brantford 
Saterday night at the 


ou 


Ont., 
Do 


M. P 


for 


P 
the 


thie 


left by 

Mainland 
route 
the 


is 


faylng at 


otf. 


‘For Shandygatis.. 


TELEPHONE +35 
P.O. BOX 180 


HE FISHING. SEASON. 
Fly Fishing. 
Salmon Fishing. 


"A fall the of nove, REELS, FLIES, Btc. 


7 


F:VIDENG 


AL 


MCN LINES, SPOONS a 
SPECIAL TROLLING TACKLE 


=> 
& GOVERKMENT STREET. 


S THE ARGUMENT 
OF ASSURANCE, 


Those whom we fitted out last Spring. and Summer with Business or Dress Suits are 
here again. We have just as good value as we did last season apd have much larger 


stock of all the jatest shades and neveities to choose from, 


Se CREIGHTON & Co, t= s TAILORS, 


ot = BROAD srager 


Howe, sisters of Mir. Stephen 
hie. guests at the Dominion. 
Howe. and Miss Ethel Howe ac 
them, T will! spend abvat-ten 
the ity 
fhe, 
Willtpa, 
(riental 
Jef}, on. 
cod wilt-enter 
mherrow. hf 
> 
the 
the 
berrin 
tris tay 
Lenedicts. 
._Welaaett, 
rd Miss Jeanie 
at the” Dominion 
gh Texas, Southern + 
nnd are now ch the 
ms 
Haslett, an 
heer -ot-the- 
nna 
an well, 
Satorday 
Daweon direct 


Mi 
“y 
formerly” porse 


appointed purse 


Mr: 


Robinson} 
has Bern 
liner 
Saloriay. 
“apote the — thew — eh 


Columbia 


Dominion Mr. Thornton 

“All-Canadian”™ 
party-earty lest year, 
n> Bawsen fetnet 


at 
by rente 
at 


the 


Mies ATO 
: Willis, of 
Minn. 1 
tevred thre 
and Oregon, 
by the © 
, Bergt 
tres? 
totice for, 
proportions 
the Tees 
oat from 
Victoriv 
Geo Bt vr. the 
hae rerorne’? from the 
down to Seattle on Saturda 
City of Nanaimo in— tine 
He 


“ 


efficient ner 
Northwest 
Iran of 
was a passe 
night 


He 


hay 


on 
te 
a well known 
come 
tee the 
Victoria yestertay—morning.. 
at the 

the 


eld acquaintanceships 


fo 


dirt starting e 


fost night's boat 
STOCK EXCHANGE QU 
retain 
[Specially fp 
Prank, 8. ‘Tawenrt & er, 


brokers.} . 
New York Stocks 


New York, Aug. 14,—The 


Open High. Lo 
14% 1 
2 137™% 1 
M, & 8ty-2, 
Manhattan 
People’s Gas . 
CR La P 
Am. Tobacco 
Atchison pfd 
Atchison com 
Union Pac. pfd 
Union Pac, com 
Tenn. Coal & Iron 
Louls. & Nash. 
Brooklyn R. T 
Am. Steet & Wire 
Federal Stéel ly 
Chicago Market. 
Aug. M.—The . follow 
tations ruled on the Board of 
Open. High. Lo 


Ls 
izg 1 
118% 1 
1% 1 
64% 


! 


117% 
Hy 
21 


“% 
87% 


441% 
my 
To 
ns% 


62% 


. 1% 
ay 


Chicago, 


Wheat— 
September 
December 

Corn— 
Septembe: 


7% 
1% 


Beptember 
STOCK Qt 
Furniahed by Mexers 
Ce,,. stock brokers, 
bc. 


FF 
% Fort street, 


Golien Star 


Cariboo (Camp MoKinney) 
Minnehwha 
Waterloo ...... 
Pentenoy 4 
raulic 


“On tronsides Se ee 
Koob Bil 
Rat huoullen 
Brandon and 
Morrison 
Winalpeg — 0.0... 
Athabasca 
Dundes, : 
Thirdineties ...... 
Noble Five 


Golden 


Two Friends 

Wonderfal Groap . 
Orow's Nest Pass Oval ..... 1 
Repabile 

Von, Anda 

Big 5 

Teer Park " 
Evening Siar .. 
Tron Colt 

tron Horse 
Tron Maek ... » a6 
Mantreal Gold Flotds 
Monte Christe Con 
Northera Relte 


Virginia . 
Victory Terumph 


B.C, Gold Fields 
Canadian G. F. 8..... 


Jones, are 


evening ..tor..Ceriand. 


Le Thorsten and wife, of Dawson 


with 


They lave 


Big Salmon. 


QUOTATIONS. 


red for the Times 
Ohte Fidei 
of Trade and New York Stock Exchange 


following gee 
tations ruled on the Stock Exchange 


Izy, 12 


87% 


ay 


Wy 


Trade 


a8 Irene 
COMPAR 
days tn 


tof Tue 
r of the 
Robinson 
thes te- 
are 
ia 
the 
a sion 
emler 


went 


of 


Ho Mire 
Whiona, 


‘alifornia 
ay home 


+ TEDED be 
Munerted 
agaiicent 
nger on 
ing come 


at Hotel 


wmrveyor 
He 
yy, cateh 
to-reach 
senewed. 
idental 
E sat 


iw, Close. 
53h 
38% 
1% 
17% 
W% 
1b 
wv 

63% 
Ds 
ti% 


4% 


16845 


1 
7% | 
i 

89% | 
13% 
Ne} 
ay 


boy, 


13% 
ing -quo- 
w. Close. 


71% Ti% 


BM 


Wy 
23% 


‘outhkes & 


4% 


a's es fon 


“ 
have unlimited money 
by all means go to the tailor and ind et his Pea 
Suit—we've nothing here as good, But 
went a nice lovking, well-made Business Suit 
that answers every requirement of the aeesee 
business man, why, buy our $1g 00 Suit and 


DONT THROW AWAY 
YOUR MONEY :-: : 


Basiness Suits $8, $10, $12, $15. 


Hats, Caps and Furnishings 
‘ FOR MAN OR BOY 


W. G. CAMERON, 


The Acknowledged Cheapest Cash Clothier ja 
in Victoria, 


55. JOHNSON STREET. 


“DENSMORE”- 


THE WORLD'S CREATEST TYPEWRITER, 


Easiest to Use, Hardest to Wear Out. 


Has ball-bearings for “every letter, thus 
reducing friction, and makes the machine 


last for.many years. in 
Sole Agents te British Cotumbia, 


The B.C. Typewriter Headquarters . 


A. BE. MALLETT, Manager, 
Board of Trade Building. Victoria. 


COWICHAN LAKE, 


The Noted Fishing and Samet Resort 
of the Island. 


EXCELLENT BOATING. 
Stage leaves Duncan's Monday, 
Wednesday and Friday. Special 


Victoria, 


i 


“Chay 


i 


“4 
Ped 
p | 
*% 


tickets wil be issued by the 

N. R. R. Co, for Cowichan 

on Monday, Wednesday and 

days, good for 15 days: %s 00 return. 
PRIC BE BROS., Props. 


During the warm Days 
ICE CREAM | 
PARLORS... 


ICE CREAM delivered, securely 
packed, to any part of the city. 


METROPOLITAN, 


Tel. 101, 39 FORT SIREET 


About one month ago my ebiid, which ts 
Tattec months old, hed an attack of aiar- 
rhuea accompanied by vomiting. I gave it 
such remedies as are uaverty given to such 
cuses, but™as nothing gave relict, wp seat 
for a physician and it, was under his care 
for a week. At this, time the chitd had 
been sick for about ten days and was hay- 
Ing about twenty-five operations of the 
bowels every twetye hours, and we ‘were 
evnvinced that anlegs it soon obtained re 
Let it wonldt not ve. Chambertatn's Colle, 
Vholera and Diarrhoea Remedy wes regom- 
mended, and ft decided to try it. 1 soon 
noties? @ ehavge for the better; by ita 
erntinhed) ese a complete ire was broughs 
about wed It is now perfectly healthy.— 


0. La Boyes, Stamprowsn, -Gibmer Cos, Wre05 


le by Henderwon Tros., Whole- 


va, For 
. 


tale Agents, Victoria and Vancouver. 


Wu 17 
rey Mate 


. ent bigh.s ean. bé 


2 Seite tnaemetis ae aac amaniel dceartnens © nn ANA A aA EARLIEST DR 
———— —ae “ 


SPEED OF BIRDS IN FLIGHT 


__ntorestiag Records. (> Gompiee Regarding Their, 
“= “Velocity--Must ¢ Greatly Modified~A'~ 
Mile a “Minute. 


It seems probable that current esti- 
mates df the speed of birds’ flight nrust 
be modified, On-Mondty, June 27th, 4 
number of carrier pigeous were fown 
front the Shetland Islands to London. 
This m-a great distance even for train- 
wd birds, the total Heugth-of the journey 
being 50144 miles.~ The date being 
a week after the longest day in the year 
the birds had the advantage of daylight 
during their whole fight, and. the win* 
ner arrived at the house ef its’ owner, 
Mr. Clotterbuek, of Stanmore, in eight 
minutes tader sixteen capeys They bad 
been liberated at Lerwick at 3:30 a.m.. 

. The official weather chart of the me 
teorological office gaye, riot for the first 
fime, information of the>utmost vale 
for estimating the conditions of wind un- 
der which the fight Was made. Hvpry 
“arrow” from Kirkwall to London potnt- 
ed dwe south. In other words, the birds 

og had the wind behind them throughout 
their journey. The resalt ie that, 
what is very nearly an approach to 8 
migration flight, the pigeons travelled at 
a speed of thirty-seven miles an hour. 

An interesting correspondence fp the 
Field following the announcement of 
this -fact.—shows how widely observers. 
differ on this very interesting question, 
but the reports ap proach more nearly to 


the lower estimate in each case in which | 


accuracy bas been possible, = in ang 
ease the surmise of the late Gatke 
that iigreting birds. trave! oe gti 
alty-at speeds reaching 
“hour cannot now be seriously defende?. 


Great Speed_of. the -Godwit. 


Yer such good Observers isa. tro. i 
hawk, one of our best painters -of birds | 
and animals, is-convineed that_a godwit | 


can fly at a speed of 150 miles an hour, 
and Sir Ralph Payne Gallwey reckons 
the the flight of a teal as sometimes 
reaching 140 miles an hour, 
been calculated that ifthe godwit-were ; 
fying at 150 miles am heer it would have 
to overcome a resixtance 
112-pounds per—aquare foot, 
erably more thau the force of a bundred- 
mile hurricane. 

Otber correspondents give | instances 
that lexve. little doubt that shore birds 
do travel at speis considerably—-abore 
650 miles an hour but as regards the 
flight. of a pigéon some expcrimemts car- 
ried out by the proprietors of the Field 
many- years ago leave little doubt that 
ths speed shown to the Shetinod-fight Is . 
normal. Twelve records with the chro 
nograph give the highest speed to the 
“blue rock” pigeon of from thirty- three | 
to thirty~ight miles-an-hour. Pheasants 
Aid partridges were_ateo subjected to ax~ 
The former made a record 
mies an hour, and the 
well ou, the wing, 


or consid: 


perunents, 
of thirty-eight 
partridges, when’ 
thirty-two-wiles 
The correspondents of the Bield,have 


180 miles an} 


But it has) 


Of alr qual ty 


of |} 


exdesvored: te-sxttn the question of _the | 


speed of birds solely hy observation, 10 
the absence of any mechanical aids sicd 
ins ara moet difficult to make, 
in the nature of things they, fall 
short of the Certainty which would be de | 
sirable. . The chief value of such con- 
tributions to the discussion is that up to! 
the’ prevent date first. hand observations 
of any kind are scarce, meagre and con- 
tradictory. 
the phenomena of flight; almost ne one 
has found time to take the necessary 
thought and trouble to collect data on a 
subject so and elusive. 
Should Writers Disagree 
When Mr. Marey published bis nianu 
mental work, ‘Le Vol des Uiseaux,” ™ 
1s such records a3 he was able to 
collect, though eminently scggestive, were 
only calculated to give uncertain otions; 
moreover, the conclusions of “ different 
writers did uot agree. Mr. 
beck, a Jeading.Belgian pigeon fiyer, as- 
signed to ~homing’ pigeons, a Maximum 
speed of 100 to 320 miles #4 hour, Wil- 
bers quoted a case of a j.ectea Which | 
had flown nearly twenty ales in as 
Here fs a difference of 
two authorities. 


uncertain 


many mm nates. 


one half between 


; comparing bird speci 


} And martins. 


Everyone has teen struck by} 


fmarked the 
Van Koose- } 


observed flight of pigesns from Paris to | 


Spa, at the rate of itty miles au byur, 


‘Lhar Uistalice ‘between the twe points 18} 


200 miles. 


of” birds’ speed oust ‘have been drawn 


up .on pure conjecture, Thus, accord.ng 
to ove authority, the quail Mies at the 
rate of seveliteen ibeters, per secon, tbe 
pigeon at twenty-seven meters, the ful- 
con at twenty-eight meters (what fal- 
con?), the swallow at sixty-sevem meters 
und the martin, at eighty eight meters, 
or about uinefy-five yards per secoud, 
Such ecémparisons are useless without 
stating what kind of flight is meant, 
The outy tight which is open te com- 
parison in the seose desired, or, rather, 


‘at Our disposal, ia 
birds from point-to point. Not, 
ample the dowoward rush of a falcon af- 
ter prey, -of the dash of a “partridge 
cover. But there are cases in which 
even these can be conipared, as when 4 
bird of prey putsues another -bird: 

In this connection this table of speeds 
is tidiculonsly Maccurate; the writer haa | 
seen a small falcon, the hobby, pursue 


and catch a swallow on the wing, though | 


the speed of the latter iv net down as 


four times greater than that of the fal- | 


con. 
A “Mile 


““Alidubon' ~ 


A Minute, Flight. 
netey are 


fm the crops of plegons’ which he sbot | 
some rice, which they could not bave 
gathered nearer than Carolina, about soo 
miles from the place whae they were 
shot. From the state. of digestion in 
which he found the rice he conctuded 
that it had been six hours in the birds’ 
erops, wed that they must therefore hi 
flown the distance at a spead of about 
@ mile a migute, 

/ He also estimated that the eiderdock 
thies at the speed of forty miles an hour, 
and the wild duck at aboat forty-tive 
milex an hour in sustained fights, One 
obvious change of errorsjo his calcula 
tion of the speed of the pigeows is the 
- possibility that digestion may have been 

* partly arrested while the birds were fly: 
ing #o long a distance. 


Nome of the so-called-tabies + 


ment 
| 


compared with* the means | 
“bya sustanier Hight of Thor in” 180%, 


for ex- | by himself in Bogsard’s Bay, and taken 


into | 


miore inte resting | 
probably newrer the truth, He found | 


! i , 
One of the standard fefereuces was an, which 4 swift dash 


———_—_—_———__—_—_—= - 
as 1800 wiles; for they have béen seen 
ata distance of more than 900 miles from 
any coast or island: But no ome can 
prove that thes do not fly by night, and | 
the effortless soaring of these oceam birds 
suggests that their power to remain on the 
wing is certainly not limited to # period Caged he pe 
of 12 hours, It seems contrary to all Premier, per bbi. 
reasonable conjecture that any bird bares Enderby, pert 
should make a daily flight of hundreds Gral 
of miles from its roosting plese. } ‘Wheat, per tone. ae 

But there are means available for «ts Corn icracked), per t 
covering the real rate of flight of the 
frigate bird not less accurately than that 
of the carrier plegon, According to Kev. Rolled cats (hi. 
8. G. Whitmes, the frigate birds are_do-_ feed— 
‘mesticated by the natives of the Ellice Hay (baled) pee ton 
Islands, In 1870 he saw numbers of ee_ bale 
them sitting abeut am perches ereeted 
for them near the bench, The natives 
atch the young birds tie them by the leg, 
nd. feed them . till they -become tame. 
Then they ke” them “toote, when ther 
regularly go ont to sea to obtain food 
and comeback to roost 

Ad+vattage of Native Custom. | 

Advantage was taken of this| by some 
of the missionaries to @stabligh a “pigeon 
pest,” conducted by frigate birds, be 
tween the islands, «aad. Mr. Whitmee 
himself saw more than one letter arrive 
in a quill attached to the wing of a fri 
gate-bird. —Here there is_a perfeét op- 
t-portanity; reads. made, for determining 
the apeet Of the vel Wine, ohe of tre 
| Soest fliers among the whole wation ot 
} birds. Tew fet likely shat the -wativer 
| of these islets, north of Fiji, and east 
| of Samoa, have ceased to tame the birds, 
and the missionaries now en the islands 
! might Paiew the experiment of the past + 
and make «a trustworthy -recerd, 

A’ very ingenious means of observing 
the speed of flight was suggestel by 
Méssrs Lisis and Movillard. This was 
to fly a bird ac some opeu aresa_oft, 
sand and to um the time at which 
the shadow crosses lines marked upon 
it. But the photographic gu0 of Mr! 
| Marey gives oxcelleut —results. If the 
i bird ix croesing the-speetator it will take 
a spinning disc image at. the rate of 
ten When the space between 
the images is metsured ul compared 
with the length of the bird's body on the 
| plate, the speed at which it is travelling 
can be -calcijated at once. : 
Observations inside from raikway car- 
riage windows give a rough means of 
The writer bas 
and has found that a 
train running at thirty-five miles an 
| hour, travels faster than the rook the 
the pheasant and -all emall binds 
seen inland, except swallows 
A covey of partridges fly- 


VICTORIA MARKETS. 
Pour— 
Ivie'a Hungarian, gl 4 rat 
bate of the Wiovod sper bb ‘ 


) per ton . 
Ground feed, per 

Vegetables— 

Potatoes (new), per 100 Ibs. . 
Water cress. per panch. ‘ 
Watermelea 

Cabbage. per .. 
Caslifiuwer, per bead 
Lettuce, -3--heads—for 

Letiate,.4-bds. for. 

—— > . 
Onious ¢ 
Gherkina per fb 
Tomatoes ... 
Beans, per ib. . 

. Peas, per 
Cucumbers, 
Cucumbers, 
Radishes;-2 bunches wove 
Kkhubartb, per ID .... 
Carrots,per Ih... “- 
Turnips, “per revere ees 

Freb— 

Salmon (smoked), per i... 
Salmon (spring), per Tb. 

Oysters (Olympian), per pt...> 

wee ot (Eastern), Mast tia.. 
Cod, per Th. * 
Hallbut, per t.. ceee 
Herring-...- 

Smeits, per P.. 

Fiounders,. .« 

Gratg. 3 for 

Parm- Prodouce— 

Eggs (Manitoba), per dos. 
Eggs {isiand, fresh), per ome 
Butte? (Delta creamery). 
Best dair 

Butter (Cowichan creumery). 

Cheese (Canad'an) 

Lard, per Ib 

Mteats— 
Hams 
Hames 
Bacon 


8 


SSRavhE Sua 


each . 
per doz. 


Istand, 
Cala. 


a BS am 


SES5 wor 


ot Mma {TRI <opt hemdb ables 


Seta 


ire 


(American), 
(Canadian ** 
(American), per pie . 
Bacon (Canadian), per BD. 
"Bacon (rolled), per .... 
Hacon (loug clear), pres DB: 
Shontaera, per @ Pt 


per .. 
per b.. 


on 


a second 


orriea,white, per TH ..,... 

erries, red, per TW .... 
Strawberries, per box 

anes, per dozen, eee 


often done this, 


+ heron, 


anuts, 
smmonty 


Lemons (Oalifornia 
Lemons (small) 


ing parallel with the train sometimes ex- Folnece os per dow 


ceed the speed of the train af between | Appies, per | Ib 
thirty-five and forty miles per hour, i Plunte . 

Accurate observations of the flight of | peered veseee 

ecormordnts might be made if anyone Grapes, per TF .. serwens 
ld take the necessary trouble when Blackbergles. ‘per Oe xcssvive 

returning to reest in the cliffs, They fly Currants ired), per 

perfectly cht » Currants (white), per > 

perfectly straight dlong shore in certain Currante (black), yer ® » 

places jest before dusk everg—evening, Laapberrios, 

and a few marks eet up and a menaure Pie 3 ts for 

ou e o ive -cur- ‘oultry— 

3 th map would give aw Dressed fowl! (per patr).....- 
ste reanite, especially if two persons Docks (per pair) ......-<..-- 
flight at diffewent angles. Turkeys (per D., live weight) 
The writer has found the speed of Duck, dressed. each 
these birds on~still evenings to approxi- 
mate to a mile in one mingte and ten 
seconds, ; 

“A mile a minute” 
| the flight is watched 
than ‘might be 
sometimes leas than 


per doz. 


ordnance 


is Jess rapid when 
from a distance 
imagine’. It must be! 
half the speed at 
past In a -aummer 
: must .be 
for. appearances—when comparing 
| the fight of Jarge birds with that of 
small ones A bee seems to .fly tke a pt 
flash—yet_ it only’ makes thirty miles an 
hour, or half the at which the 
heavy cormdrants fly home to bel.—Lon- 
don Spectator. 


rwances 


spond 


Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles tnab 
| @ent to i state of the system, auch af 


Diztiness, Nai ance, Drowsiness, Long owl — 
eating, Pain in the fide, &c. 


a Od a 


~ SICK 


yot Chrter’s Little Liver Pile es 


LITERARY NOTE. 


The most striking feature of the Cen 
tury for. September, which will be a 
Salt-Water- Number, is the -first instal- 
of Captain Joshua Slocom’s “Sail- 
ing Alone Around the World.”- This is 
the of a daring voyage of cir- 


cumna vigs tion, padgertaken..bx, ths... Seo 
ih a forty-feot sloop built 


Biatachs, yot 
equally valuablein Constipation, 
venting thie anmoyi: 
| eae plenary oe 


HE Al 


giles sonaey ear 


ACHE 


‘Bathe bane of so many lives that bere ts where 
we make our grest boast, Qur pillacureit while 
others do pot. 

Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and 
very cary to take, One or two pony a 


perfeout i drt ting pica gn 

hy “raggists ever) where, or sent by mall 
CARTER MEDICINE CO., New Yor, 

fimall Fil. all Doge, Shall Prion 


— 


The Boscowitz bin ps Co., Ld. 


SIR. BOSCOWITZ. 


Will leave Spratt's wharf 


FRIDAY. AUGUST il 
AT OP, M. 


For. Naas River and Way Ports 


Kine 


+ 


curing and 
qonkplaint wisi 
itestomachatrs 
5p # 


narrative 


rnd forth across the Atlantic and 
raid Cipe Hori wid the Cape 
toul” Hope, without xassistarice or 

companionship. The distance traversed 
| wet 46,000 miles, and the acewraey—-of 
j the aavigator's tandfalls throughout was 
a thing to marvel at, hia chronometer for 
| Inost of the time being a little tin clock 
| of the cheapest kind, Captain Sloenm 
was a thoroughly seasoned sailor when 
| he started on his adventurous | single 
| bénded erui but. his unique achieve- 
ment was vot. without difficuities and 
{-periln that taxed —to--the-atmost— hin - 
strength, endurance and ingenuity, Oth- 
er contents of this number of the Cen- 
| tary are “The Way of a Ship.” by 
| Frank T. Bullen, author of “The Cruise 
j ot the Cachalot;* “The Atlantic Speed- 
| Way,” by HH. Phelps Whitmarsh, au- 
thor of “The World's Rough Hand?’ 
nnd “Salvage,” by Morgan Robertson, 
| author of the fortheoming volume of sea 
tales “Where Angels Fear to Tread.” 


NOT THE TREE.” 
Laine tL 


When disease has become chronic and 
deep seated It Is-often dificilt to cure It. | 
‘That fs the reason why It Is .best to take | 
flood's Sarsaparilia when disease frst | 
shows Itself—in- pimples, headaches, fnidl- 

| gestion, or other troubles which teli of | 
poor blood, weak stomach or disordered 
oes rr ne whol This great medicine regu- 

lat ave the ole ayetem. It never disap: | 
polnts. 


ON 


SERERSY 4 


| 
15| The 
| 


‘iJ. F TROWBRIDAE. Puget Sound Supt., 
| | GOODALL, 


hae ee 


VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, MON DAY, “AuGtsT. 1d, 1899. 


TRANSPORTATION. 


Time Table No. eae Effect iuly 


sochagphiene 
VANCOUVER ROUTE, 
Victoria to Vancouver—Dally, Monday, ut 
1 o'clock a.m., Sanday, 11 pe Vancouver 
to Victoria— Daily, except Monday, at i 
ota o'clock, or on arrival of C. R. 
1 tra'n. 


NEW WESTMINSTER ROUTE, 


BENNETT LAKE AND OPER YUKON wou 


Carrying Canadian and Yattea 
Btates Malis and Express. 


THROUGH TICKETS. 
"AND BULLS OF LADING 
Prom ay Columida and Puget 


Sunday's stea 
nevtta with 


« to New Westminster con- 


cP —eF ~ 


od Pointe to at-T o'clock. For Pender 
lands—Friday ‘at 7 ‘o'clock. 
estmiinster for Victor 
day &t 1 o'clock p.m.; Thursday 
day at 7 o'clock. For Plomper Pase— 


’ ‘ Thureday und Saturday at 7 o'clock. For 
Pender and Moresby Islande—Thureday at 
aWwSONn 2)! = 
- NORTHEEN ROUTE. ~ 
ad Y } Steamsh!; 


for Fort mpeon and intermediate rts, 
¥ia Vancouver, the ist, 10h and 201 each 
Goods routed through in bond. 
Express matter and postal expreas 


mooth, at 8 o'clock p.m. 
ALASKA ROUTE. . 
of this company will lave 
messages carried at reasonable Pa of Weleay a 8 p.m. for Wrange! 
rates. Dyea and Skagwa, 
Fast ‘through steamer “service be- BARCLAY SOUND ROUTE. 
tween Bennett City and Dawson ty. Willapa lenyes Vittoria for Alberni 
City. and Sound *, on the Ist, Tth, 14th and 
For rates and. reservations apply. Sith of each month, extending latter trips 
at the General Office, “he. compat foarte the 4 t tot 
eba this time table at any Ome 4 
32 Fort Street. Vietoria, ot betiination 
7 or to G. A. CARLETON. 
: Gesegy! reight Agent. 
A. HB, MACGOWAN, Gen, ANT, - 
226 Cambie street, Vancouver. * passenger Agent: 
FRED. P. MEYERS, Gen. Agent, 
1065 Yesler way, Beattie. 


[G= PN. Com Lda, Steamers 


Will leave Tureer, Beetou & Co.» 


LIGHTNING EXPR Ress TO SKAGWAY 
IN % HOURS 


S.“CITY.OF SEATTLE” 


Sale for 


kagway Direct Every 10 Days. 


Ne stops. “No delays. “Rousd tp ta 
seven days. Rates same as on other steam- 
ers. Finest accommodations and ~ best 
cuisine. Next sailing, 


TUESDAY, 29th AUGUST, 


Subsequent ‘saflings, Sept. 8, 18, -28, and 
every 10 days thereafter. 
“For 7ie tnd_information appls_to 
DODWELL & CO., UTD... 
Telephone 550. 4 Government St. 


‘Pacific Coast Steamship Go, 
For San Francisco. 


The 


Carrying Her Majesty's Mails. 
As follows at 8 p.m. 
“TEES” ..... August 15 
NUBE” . , August 22 
EEs&” August 29 


And from Vancouver on on following days. 


For gs and pareai pa way, at the 
@iice of company, street, 
Victoria, B.C. -The compasy reserves the 
right of changi whip time-table at aay 
me without | “fottheation. 


C.P.N. a , LTD. 


“QUEEN CITY” 


(McCOSKRIE, Master.) 


; 
} 
| 


Carrying Her Majesty's mailé-~will leave 
"raruer, Becton & Co.'s wharf for 


—NAAS AND WAY PORTS 


Wednesday, August '6th, and trom, Venoouver at 
12 noon on August I7th. 


company's 


-Queen. 
M ee, Walla Walla 
Jmatilla, carryl H 
mails, leave Victor 
a ty a 2, 7, 22. 37, 22 27; 1 
1, 16, 26; Oct. 1 and every Fr 
‘or freight or 
| Re any Sherratt wank alee of company, 64 Wharf street, Victoria, B. 
OC; 16 tm, Auenet 4 2 14, 9, 34" -|C The company reserves the right of 
~ wv gre changing this time table at any time, with- 


2-18-18, 28, 28; Oct. 
day thereafter. ‘ nut, noacation, Dons 


FOR ALASKA. 
LEAVE SEATTLE © A.M. 


ie ity, Avg. 18, 28; Sept. 12, 27. 
ty « ‘opeka, Aug. 8, 23; Se a3 
ALKi, Aug. 3; 16; t. 2 Pte =, 
And every ftth day thervafter. 
steamer Cottage City will call Z | 
Victoria, p.m., August 14, 2, Sept. 12, 37, 

for passengers and freight. 

Fer further information obtain folder. 

| The company reserves the right to change 
without got totice steamers, sailing 
dates and hours of sailing 

R. sy cures & ©0,, Agents, _ Victoria, 


elegant | 
and | 
-M. 


passage apply at the office 


iia 


THE VY. V. T. CO..8 STEAMER 


ALPHA” 


Witt Leave Turser, Keeton & Co;*s 
Wharf for 


‘| Dyea, Skagway and Wrangel 
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9h, 


And from VANCOUVER at 12 noon on 
following day. 


For freight and pdssage appl 
office of the company, 36 Fort a 
teria, B. C., or at C. P. N. Co.'s office. 

The company reserre ue right of chang 
ing thie time table at any Ume without 


notification. 
_J. D. WARREN, Manager. 


the 
Vie- 
Ocean Dock. Seattie. 
PERKINS & CO. 
San Franelsco, 


Gen. Axts., 


“The Milwaukee” 


A familiar name for the Chicago, Mll- 
waukee & St. all 
over the Union as the Great Rallway ron 
the Limited” 
day and ulght between St. 


HUMBOLDT STEAMSHIP CO. 


LIGHTNING BAPRESS TO DYEA 
AND SKAGWAYT IN 566 HOURS. 


‘SS. HUMBOLDT 


SAILS FOR 


Dyea and Skagway 
| Direct every ten days, No stops. No de 


aye. Rodund trip in seven days. Rates 
same as on other steamers. Next miling 


Monday, August 14th. 
nt sailings, August 24th, Sept. 


Paul Raliway, known 


ning “Pioneer trains every 
Pav! and Chica; 
“The only | 
perfect trains in the world.” - Understand 

lone are nade wih Ate Papnscon- 
tinental Lines, assuring to passefigers the 
Laxurions coaches, 


of a vertty 


go, and Omaha and Chicago, 


Subse 
} 3 43, 23. 
— 
For ratea and information apply to DOD- 
WELL oO. LA, Agenter 4 Government 
street Telephone 650. 


“The Mil- | 
when golng to any point fn the ALASKA STEAMSHIP CO. 


oom 1 "| For Alaska and Gold Fields, 


or other Informa- 


known. 
eleetrio lights, 


best. service 
steam heat, 
equaled by no other Hue, 


See that your ticket reada via 
waukte”* 
United Btates or 
ngenta sel] them. 


Por rates, pamphiets, STEAMERS 


“Dirigo’’=“‘Rosalie” 


SVERT THURSDAY 


Caliteg at Mary Island, Metiakrbtla, Ket- 
chikan, Wrangel, Juneau, Skagway and 


Dyea. 

ioe full particulars apply to Canadian 
Development._Compans, - Kgenta, 2. 

| strest. Telephone 616. 


the n, address, 
c. J. EDDY, 


Beacrat-Agent,- 
Or, 


J. W. CASBY, 
cn DTGS, PAB Agt 9 
Seattle, Waab. 


A FEW 
IN TE RESTIN G | Victoria ané Te: Texada Island. 


FACTS, SIR. CLAYOQUOT 


When people are contemplating a trip, WILL LEAVS 
whether on business of pleasure, they 
naturally, want the best service obtain- | Nanaimo for Texada, ee eae 
able so far as epeed, comfort and safety | Texada for Nanaimo, ‘Sat 7 Tom 
are Concerned. ~~ Reployere vt the “wis: Senstme omen at way 
OONSIN CENTRAL LINES are paid to . dnestey Book 
serve the public and our ¢ ate Oper- Every W we py ae id 0 Ste 
ated co as te make close connections with 
diverging Mues at ali junction points. 

Paliman Palace Sleeping aod Chair Cars 
on through trains. 


Dining Cat service unexcelied, Meals 
served a la Marte. 


In order -to obtala this Sret-claas service, 
ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticket 
ovee 


THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES 


and you wil) make direct connections at 
St, Maul for Ohicago, Milwankee and -all 
polots Bast. 


For any further Information call i om any 


Portland, 


Spokane Falls & Nou thera 
Nelson & Fort Sheppard 


The only all ratl 


Nelson and Rossiand. 


DAILY TRAINS. 


| Arrive. 
<> 00 "pom, 


. Nelson ..... 20 pum, 


INVESTIGATE FULLY. 


= DEA SKAGWAY, WRANGEL ~ = 


Cor. Goverumest and Fort Sta, 
Reacenes ie Be sin Be 


art 


Victoria for Nanaimo, Thereday. ....-6 &.m. |, 


a Fee 


For ‘rates apply ou board or at Porter's 
Whart. 


“Red Mountain Railways 


route without 
change of cars between Spokane, 
Rossland and Neilson. Also between 


THE PACIFIC AND ARCTIC RAILWAY AND NAVIGATION CO. 
BRITISH COLUMBIA YUKON RAILWAY Co. 


oe 


Leave _. Victoria ... 
eae ‘Wednesday and bins Sunday okt | Our Tracks are completed to Eake Bennett, B.C.. 


Shipments Receive Prompt Despatch. 


We are Authorized United States 
and Canadian Bonded CarrlerSen.. 


of this company will leave Through Bills of Lading Issued to Atlin,- B.C. or Dawson, N.W.T. 


WE CUARANTEE DELIVERY DURINC SEASON OF WAVICATION, 1899. 


—e- ee 


DO NOT BE MISLED. 


M 


SKAGUAY IS THE GATEWAY 


--TO-- 


YUKON, KLONDIKE and ATLIN. 


For rates and-particulars apply to 


it 6 
-Gommercta] koenk 
Trounce ayende, Victoria. 


Send 2 cents in stamps to any of our agents for cur new 


Dexter Hocrton Bldg.. ‘Beattie. 


map Atiip, 


‘Quick Time 


a : 


STEAMSHIP 
TICKETS 


See 

TO AND-FROM iz 
| 
| Operating tke Latest Improved Pullman 
| First-class and Tourist Sleepers...’ 
i 


For ‘tickets, mapa, ete. apply to 
ae BE BLACK W6OR—Acent— 
Ade ph pr wile ding, Government Street, Vic 
toria, B. C. , 


¥la Montreal, 


Quebec, Boston. of 
New York, and all mahip iines, 
For all information as to sailings, 


rates, etc., apply A. T.. CHARLTON, 


Assistant General Passenger. Agent, Port- 


land Ore, 


Puget Sound & Maska-Sieamihip €, 


TIME CARD Wo. 


B. W..GREER, Agest, 


halon Fe 


$00 PACIFIC LINE 


DAYS~— 


Across the Continent 
By the 
“tupertal Limited 


The fastest and best equipped 
train crossing the continent. 
Traina leaving the Pacific 
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 
connectat.Fort William. with. the 
palatial iInke steamers “MANI- 
TOBA ALBERTA” and “ATHA 
BASCA”™ across the Great. Lakes. 
Far full particulars as to time, 
rates, and for copies of C. PF. R. 
publications apply to 
B. W. GREER, Agent. 
Jor. Government-and Fort streets, 
Victoria, B.C. 


Subject to-change without Hetice, 


STR. UTOPIA 


FROM SEATTLE DAILY (& 
SUNDAY). (EXCEPT 


Ly. Seattle . 

Ar. Port Townsend 

Ly. Port Tewnsend 

Ar. Victoria 3 
FROM VICTORIA DAIL Y (EXC 

SUNDAY). — 

Ly. 

Ar. 
| Le. 

y | Ar. 


DODWELL & €o., 


Vietoria 
Port Townsend. . 
Port Townsend 


LD., Gen'l Agents. 


REN, 


—aND— 


Coast 


LOWEST RATES. 
SHORTEST ROUTE. 


Beattie to all 


piste East and Southeast, 
yia_ Portland, It Lake City and Deover. 
yiwen palace sleepers, upholstered tour- 
ts and_free redining chair cars; 

- = eat, Pintsch. lignt. 
Por tickets to or from any polote in the 
United States, Camada or Berove. call om 


or a 
RICHARD HALL, Agent, 


rs 100 Government street, 
Fast Mail K ® ELLIS, Gen. Ageht, 
Seattle. 
= 


W. B. JULBURT, G.P.A., 
Portland. 


THE _NORIH-WESTERN-LINE. 


Have added two more trains {the 
Fast, Mat}) to their Bt. Pa: 
rh ins making eight trains 


'Agoney Atlantie SS, Lines 


FROM GREAT BRITAIN OR 
THE CONTINENT. 


HALL, GOEPEL & CO., 


100 Government Street. 


SETwEeRy 


Oregon ShortLine 


ee 


he 


wowbettd fe 


Victoria & Sidney — 


RAILWAY. 
Trains will ran b between, Victorta and 
Sidney ae follows: 
DAILY: 
Leave Victoria at, <.....7:00 a.m., 400 pam 


The. 20th Centery train, “the 
finest train in the roe leaves 
St. Paul every in the year at 
6:10 p.m, 


Fr. W. ienernl Agee 
Gene 
3 ” SAFURDAY: 


Leave Victoria at.......700a.m. 200 p10, 
Leave Siduey at.. jem * 15 a.m, $2.pom 


- —° SUNDAY: 


Leave Victoria at.......0:004.m, Tae pm 
Leave Sidney at . 1695 a.m. $95 pm 


fr. AUNERALZS to aall Wednesday, 


Leave Sidsey at......,.805 am, S18 pm_ 


4 VIA VANCOUVER. . wg 8 Saisth "ts - HONOLULU gel. - 
With the : it) Nelson with steamer ALA to sall Wodocwday, 7s Goverrment Street, Vietorla, 5. 


Another statement deing 
frigate birds depend on the assurmption 
, that it neither flies by night nor sleeps on 
the water, If this is correct, the dis- 


tunes traveled by these ocean birds in | 


a single day must amount to as much 


HOOD'S PILLS are the favorite family” 
| cathartle. } 


———— 

More cases.of sick headache biliousness, 
constipation, can be cured in less time, 
with less: medicine, and for less money, by 
using Carter's Little Liver Pills, than’ by 
any other means, 


' company's office, Sank on biock, 
Vietoria, B,C, 


@ 


Por freight and peevepe apply at the 


tore street, 
The company reserves the right of chang- 


ing this time table without notification. 


H. LOGAN, General aon 


and all Lake. Potts. 


gs connection 
sale oot ror Kettle River and Hound- 


connect at Marcus with. stage 


0. @. DIXON, G, P, & TA. 
o Spokane, W 


4, if » p.m, 
te COODGARDIB, Aus, and CAPR 


® & RROR Oo, 
OULEOMETY. Street, 
~ Market virent. Ban 


sz (SS“Utopia” }.ir* 
connecting a Haatt- wih overiané Flyer 


Agets OY ie 
H. ROGERS, Agt 


Freight 
Pelee 


7 


__ result 


addt Ct4eSeess 


rovineial News. 


—_—o— 
QUESNELLE. . 
es here that Hugh McDou- 
all, while at work with D. 8 Deans 
fting on the Queanelle -about twenty 
miles below here for the New England 
Company's dredger, wae «wept. off ‘the 
reft and drowned, Mr, Deans had a nar- 


News reac 


Se Cee ee Se ee 


boat at Glilley’s slip, ahd went home for 
& short time, but on returning next 
Ynorning. found nothing but a short plece 
-of the-painter, - 

‘The wedding was celebrated’ in St. An- 
4Grew's (Presbyterian) church, .hete on 
Eriday afternoon, Rev. Thos; Scouler. offi- 
clating; of Kate ‘M. “McKensie, youngest 


} eister. of Mr. John McKenzie, Dominion 


row:eacape,. but. reached shore. safely, 


Mr. McDougall Was a native of Ontario. 
Hils_body was not recovered: 


REVELSTOKE, 

Miss Mallard has arrived from Weat- 
minster ‘to prepare for her duties at the 
public school. She formerly wae on the 
teaching ‘staff of the Donald school. 

No, 2 fire brigade has elected the fol- 
lowing officers. Chief) 8. L. Saunders; 
@epity chief, J. G. Allan; hose captain, 
K. D. J. C. Johnson; hook and ladder 
captain, W. Meldrum; secretary-treasur- 
er, C. R. McDonald. 


—_—o— 

ROSSLAND. 

Miss Coward, the dressmaker, “was 
awakened the other night by an attempt 
of burglars to enter her house. 


ed the thieves away. 
The clerks and salesmen 
are out with a@ “ircutar-woticiting the. co- 
operation of the general public in matin 
taining the present early closing agree- 
ment to the extent of not patronising 
merchants who keep open after 7 p.m. 
— 

KASLO. 


authoritatively stated 


it ts that work 


Ong a much larger scale than—heretofore{ 
Swill be AT White Feiumed on the Arrow- | 


head & Kootenay in the Lardo- 
Doncanr district 

A stock company 
Nelson to develop the 
ry 
will be established in Kaslo 
ment given number of men in 
preparing into 


products. 


railway 


ts being organtzsed tn 
Kaslé. stone quar- 


and employ 
to a large 
the —marble 


—o-— 
MOYIE. 


of Rossland | 


She cried | 
out for assistance and thereby frighten- | 


| 


or tie aartee APA Ie to Jute Wh 
] The -rotlowing isthe tabie wt figures: 


It is also expected that cutting yards 


marketable } 


Thing® are going swimmingly along in’ 
the south end of Moyte, and the-way int 


which that portion of the town has built 
up in the last thirty days is simply as- 
tonishing. 
buliding in the town. This -will- be -built 
by J. C. Dréwry on two lots which he 
recently purchased on the extreme south- 
rn end of Tavistock street. The bullding 
will be twenty-nine feet wide, sixty feet 
jong and three stories high 
thirty-six. rooms,.including a large kit- 
chen, and will ha 
at last fifty.men.._ The 
used exchisively as a boarding 
the’ house for the nieri employed at 
Lake Shore mine. 
map 
GREENWOOD. 

last Monday 
cn Ag thd 
the~ Mother 


and wag- 
the 


Shortly after midnight 
aright. dowadaiows, Masato 
fell from the surface of 
Lode shaft and was 
the bottom. Manstello and two 
miners got-into the hoist.at a level pear 

» the bottom, and Mantello gave the sig- 


nal for-heisting ore instead of for hoist- | 


men* were 
and at 


The 
to the 


three 
surface, 


ing passengers. 
rapidly hauled 


the collar-of the shaft, just as the en-| 
three | 


gineer applied the brakes, the 
men séeihg their danger, jpmped Tw 
landed safely, but Mantello jumped into 
the shaft*and fell a distance of 214 
feet. He was instantly killed, This is 
the first, fatal accident in the Mother- 
Lode mine. 
: — = 
ASHCHOFT. 

Mackinnon, C.E., Is visit 
Mr. Mackitinon has lately pafil 
a visit to New Zealand and spent some 
time there looking into operations 
carried on in that colony for the recovery 
of gold by dredging in creeks and rivers, 
and judging from what he. has seen he 
does not hesitate to say that there fs a 
tanger—and richer field for dredging 
British Columbia. 

Mr. R. T. Ward, manager of the Horse- 
fly: mine, spent a day in Ash 
week on his way to Ban Franc 
business trip. He left with the 
B.N.A., Ashcroft;-abort— 5,00 
ment. Aa samples of the rich dirt of 
Horsey Mr. Ward had tn one bottle the 


about to 


Mr. 
Cariboo 


the 


| Working 


It is now te_have the highest | 


It will have | 
| Raliway 


ve arvcommodattions for} 
huliding -will be | 


j 
t 
| 
| Total Gross Karnings 


picked up dead at 
other | 


} came to i 


| breast remavked + 
in } 


for ship- i 


lands agent, of this city, and Mr. J. P. 
McLeod, B.A, 4@ barrister of Midway, B.C. 
Only a fewepersonal friends Were present. 
The bridé receftly retired from a posi- 
tion on the teaching staff of the West- 
minster pablia aechool. 

Fisheries. officers, who have just _re- 


“ 


sete th ete eee teh tet tetete 


A 


Fair Returns from Placer Grovnil. 


George A. Doyle has returned to Nel- 
; son from the placer claims at the head 


of the Kettle river, thirty. miles west of 
thé Columbia river, via Fire yalley, 
which are owned by himself, P; BE. Wil- 


son, Fred. Williamson and James Reilly~ 


The grant corsists of fourteen ‘claims, 


ht a NER nt 0 SAIN PN > 4 PRR TETRA NORA NT ay 


‘ VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1899 


Veair to conctude that more (am §1,000,000, f 


| ana perhaps jwice that amoun’, has been 
i taken ont on he Horsetly,—Ashorott Tour. 


Aroond Ymir, Fa brie 


0,3) a aniet, ok Sale hab retarted 


fom Sixteen Mile creek, where be has} 


beon having, dasexemneut work done on the 
Riemwlides claim. Ne brought back—with 
him some exceedingly tne uiineral which 
was taken from the property at a depth 
of 32 feet, This property hfe a lend on 
tt of four feet in width and ts oa fasure 
between grasite, 

Tom Wood, foreman at the Big “Horn 
rac, reports that work Ix steadily bebog 


turned from ay ofmMficial. trip up river,| aud from present indications will, tarn | Medeeuted, and tht the pryperty. Is, look- 


brought with them several salmon nets / 
belonging to Indians who had been fish- 
ing beyond the limita, ‘The seizure of the 
nets brought a jot of complaining Indians 
down to town, and ‘these, through the 
medium of thé Indian agent, were fully | 
enlightened on the gravity of their be | 

They expressed contrition, and | 
more fish, | 


havior, 


promised not to sell any 


out to be rich ground. The company 
hare built a gitch eight’ hundred fect 
long to tap: Beaver lake and have an 
abundant, supply of water for glui¢ing 
purpdéses, A ground sluice of four hun- 
aired feet bas been dug for the sluice 
boxes and they are now prepared ‘to 
handle from thirty th fit{y yards of dirt 


per day, -A force of three men were left 


; Inge well. 
| The Yellowstone mine management has 
iM} men at work thelr road and are 
paylng “them at the rate of 82,50 per day 
per man. 

Hugene 


on 


aoperintendent 
Rossland (Yimir) Gold Miping Oo,, 
that he work very 
ou the company's property at Your, 


of the 
roports 
shortly 


Crotean, 


will commence 


whereupon théir nets wére restored to) at work and washing war started ont)” 


them, 
PLEASANT READING, 


— 
Satisfactory Returns of British Colombla 
Biectric Railway Company. 


—_—o— 

The figures Olustrative of the progress 
of the British Columbia Electric Rallway 
MP continue to grow, The state. | 
went of cartligs and expenses aa recety- 
od by cable for the month of June from 
the bead office tn London show an—ii- 
croase of over $1,200 tn the gros earn- | 
ings for Vancouver over those of the same 
@onth of 1808. ‘Westminster alao shows | 
& sattefactory locressc; Victoria, however, | 
shows a Talltig of. In the Vighting*re- |} 
turns, “both” Vaneouver wid’ Victoria fg 
hres give evidence af tncrensed proaperity; 
New Westiilaster of course Is lidependent 
of onteide ititumivating ald, The net‘ eara- | 
nm light ond reilway are over $4,000") 


Conypa 


; 


les 


Grows Rarologs. PRs. 180, 
Railway 
Vancouver Branch 
Victorla Hranch 


West ortoster Branch 


$ 6.400 
7,180 


6,181 


$ 7.1 
OM | 
7006 

Lighting 
Yancouver Branch 
Westnilaster Bravich 
Vietorte Branch 

Total Gross Barnings 


6,983 
3,506 | 
90,106 | 


18,402 
11,704 


Expenses 
Profit 


Net 1. 
earnings 


to Jone 


Aggregate @roes 
from April Ist 
noth trea 
Karnings 
June 
w 


lncrease. 


Aggregate Net 
from April Ust 


ch 7s 35,081 | 


Grows Earning® Decreas. 


Voneenver branch .....8-4.211 
Victoria Branch . 
Westminster Branch Aa 

taghting— : } 

Branch oH 

Westminster . Branch 


Victoria Branch 


row } 


Vanconver 
1K) | 
1.308 5 | 
S76 | 


} Ryan sod 


Saturday Jast. On the adjoining pro- 
perty_sluicing has been guing on for 
some time, the returns being from $1 to 
$1.50 per cobic yard, . 


Payroll a Thousand Dollars a Day. 


Jomes McOreath .6f Greenwood isin 
Nelson, He says that business is good 
throughout the Boundary district and 
that the country is making .rapid pro: 
gress. In the opinion of. mining. men, 
the ‘Phoenix camp will be one of the 
richest joa British Columbia, The Tron- 


sides, Knob Hill, Gold Drop, Brandon, | 
| Golden Crown and Winnipeg are em- 


ploying about 20) men on eight-hour 
shifts at $3.50, so that the payroll. of 
the canip is close dn $1,000 per day. The 
Stemwinder and the Brooklyn are the 
only mines ¢losed_on- account of_the  re- 
fusal of the owners to accept the eight 
hour, jaw, Over $150,000 worth of 


}-aew mining machinery has béen taken 


into the camp this season, and all the 
working mines are sow well equipped 
with the most modern niachinery. “A 
cable railway will shortly be built con 
netting Phoenix and Greenwood, a dis 
tance of four miles. 

Sllvertyn Notes 


The Torpedy crim Js another property 
that-te-fast-coming to the front. and thar 
gives promise of making another produc 
ing mihe. Tala property Nes shout 
ii Thom fowh @id e@djolie te Vancou 

Work t« poshed vigor 
the Cline, Frank 
Had. 

The Marion, 4 proalsing Sitver Mountain 
prowpect; has bonded by David" W. 
King for T Cvnsiderable de 


ver Group. 
ously by 


being 
owners, I. 
Stewart. 


been 


Fonte people 


| vVelopment Work was.done last snninivr aad 


@ carload of ore was shipped 
WG WIT Wave controt of the 
commenced work last We'tnesday 
sent only mew 
doubtiess 9 good force wil! soon be put_on- 
The work. being done on the Queen Frac 
ties claim, on the lake shore below town, 
matrated that the Queen 
vein and the Noonday are Wentical and 
the Mhe., ledge well 


Mr. King, 
property; 
At pre 

euployed,. but 


four are 


ss den 


name. is showing up 


three | 


Fraction | 


| The miners ¢ In the Snowshoe, , 
in Greenwood Camp. hAV# fone oat on a 

{ateike. ‘hey demand $4 a day. The clalin 

for increneed wages ls based on the fact 

that the workings In the Snowshoe are 
| wee The demand was refused, The pre 
i was recentiy bonded by A, J. Me- 

Millan, of Rossland, on behalf of an Boy 

itah syndioate, 


| Strike In the Virginia Mipe. 


}_ Phe annual motting of the Virginia Min. 
jing Company was held In its offices fa 
Rossland last week, with Mr, Joba M. 
| Sualth, vice-president, in the chair, Tho 
priomipal feature of the meeting was the 
repect of Mr. W, A. McPbersen, the supet- 
}iniondent. which was of a nature to ipeedit- 
theonrage tre steck bolder. In faet, 
a-tiscorery, which te regented an of con 
| siderable frapertan been and 
Lat, the sapre — thane. work le progressing at 
tothe lower torete“tn. order: to:cgain depts 
and to get under the rich #urface show 
Pings. “At ax point 200-fert and wo 
| feet enst of the shaft house, » vein of rich 
ore has located. Two shafts have 
been sunk depth of & feet In this 
showing....They. are ( feet apart and on 
a vein five feet In width The ‘ore from 
| thle goes from $8 to over $100 per 
tom The ore will average. it is thought, 
$25.10 the ton lt is the charaetertatic 
| copper-gok? ore of the cam The work of 
epplering for-this ore echote Is tn progress 
WO-foot level. It Is the ‘Woat thy 
portaut strike that has yet been .made in 
|. the Virginia aod js due to careful surface 
preepecting on the part of Superintendent - 
McPherson The fottowing bewrd of direc 
tors were elected: Messrs. C, Ro Hosmer, 
| Georce FE. Hart, W, M. Doull, A. HL Mae 
j Nei, D. Campbell and John M, Smith 


Week's 


i 
| ty 
| 


has wade 


wont 


been 


to a 


vela 


Deliars One 


Run 


Kleven |. Hundred in 


Word was brought te town. thin week 
} Eros fire — taste — eb bas 
that the elean-ap from the for 
lohe week's run amounted to $1,100, Work 
| in still going on sod the rich quarts apd 
thre will make an 


end of 


arrastra 


igh 


the 


| material being pat 


l other good cleamop at the 


a rch. 


Aggregate Net arniugs 

from April ist to June 

Soth . docdte| 4088 re | 
Farnings 

to June 


Aggregate Gross 
from April ist 


ooth 4,1 eee 


TING .CUSTOM LN 
HAITI. 

Of course there is in Haiti a 
vircle of native born Creoles who 
naturaiiy-hern tadies and geptlemen, ¢xX- 
in their courtly mmonners and | 
most desirable friends, Then the 
whitemen who are living there, as 1 
have already mentioned, are characters 
If they take a liking to you all they 
have or can capture, is yours. The fol 
will illustrate this characteris- 


THE -TRE 
small 
are 


quisite 
as 


lowing 
tic? 

Wine host and a friend were walking | 
through « leading thoroughfare of one | 
of the towns, when the friend suddenty 
stundstill, and placing his | 
long, nervous index finger on mine host's 


“My dear boy, in bere they make the} 
best cocktaila in Haiti, 1—have «pent | 
three fortanes in. assuring myself of this, | 
Let's go and try 

There was a prompt 
from the pathwalk to the interior of the 
buitding,a few minutes of delightful, | 
expertant site as the ingredient#] 

shaken together, a mutual bow, | 


one. / 


adjournment | 


| best 


aud it will be no surpris® if the 
encounter a big chute ef par 
time, _ The e is true anil well 
and the. uatneral found rich 


countered 
owners 
at any 
defined. 


ore 


chute 


total 
tor 


hundred amt forty. toms Is the 

of the ore shipments from fhe Take 
week The Enterprise mine 
sent out. 90 tons from Enterprise 
Landing. This mine ts_withent doubt the 
developed property on the take aad 
position to ittake large and steady 

whenever th feel 
starting.wp the m This ore ship 

the for- 
sixty 


the past 


Ten Mile 


isin a 
shipments mahagement 
Nke 
ped was part of that take’ or 

Friday, 
Noouday 


by 
tons 


from 


agement 
by 
Slivertonian 


mer mat On 


were sent the minis 


Silverton 


out 

The 
Horsefly Country 

The fly 

known a 

Dole dis 


h long beet 
sections of Brit 
found and 
riy miners, H 
Archie Ruther: 
discovered the 


country . 
of the rich 
and gold 
by ‘thé « 
Moore, 
havin 

Lead in 


inh was 
gronnd worked 
lagrahaig,. Jumes 
ford ond others 
then ee Itine 


lebrated the 


An’ old Caritboolte 
of thone days 


four years ago) enys 


in roculing his 
(in an loterview 


lease 
xperte 
held some 
“There Lave” been number of 
ianges stn’e I first saw this part of the 


quhe a 


gold taken fom thres pounds of gravel 
from bedrock, the amount being over 9%; 
from two pans $1,300, and in about a -pan- 
ful 6f rich gravel tint he was taking to 
shows to his partners there a num- 
ber of hundred dollars in sight, probably 
from $600 ‘to $1,000 in the one pan.—Ash- 
croft Journal. 


was 


~o& 
VANCOUVER. 
"\Magata Saga, a -year-old Jap, 
drowned at Westham Island on Friday 
The drowning - was - accidental, The 
boy's father is a tishernian 
Mr. John Barwick received serious in 


was 


scion an Aisa by _a f; HL from a ladder 
iY 


meoaptecte swe eg Ravenna Lerma, ns 
Ae card the Pelationa Lelween Gorniany 


at a lumber callp on liowe Sonn 


re house on 
dug with concussion of. the brain 
from the effects of a severe cut on the 
back of the head. ‘The ladder from 
which he fell was raised frow the deck 

‘of & seow to a bigh skidway. When 
about 20 feet up he slipped and fell, 

He landed on bis he ou the scow, and 
glanced off into the water. Some fellow 
workmen palled him ont, He wus 
brought back tq Vancouver unconscious. 
‘On Saturday he was somewhat recover- 
ed, 

‘On Barurdey” morning Ths 
Mayor Garden drove Captnin E, G. De 
ville, surveyor-general of Canada, up to 
the water works dam on the Onpilano 
river, Mr. J. D. Townley, assistant su- 
perintendent of the Canadian Pacific 
railway, and Mr. 8. Madison, foreman 
‘of the. Vancouver water works, aecom~ 
panying the party. This year the city 
has expended $100,000 in improving ita 
pater service, and #6 vernal = importint 
works are at present in hand on the north 


and 


Worenyyy 


side of the Narrows, all of which were| 


inspected during the drive out At the 
“water works dom a short stay for luneh 


was made by the party. 


—o- 
KEW WESTMINSTER. 
About 4 o'clock ‘on Saturday afternoon 


> Gre broke out in the big Chinese tene- 


ments in Chinatown, but the prompt ar- 
rival of the chemical ¢ngine prevented 


any noticeable damage 
A fishermen nained -Loverin, living 
this city, reports having had his boat and 


ret.stolen.on-Frnday night, He tled his ; Hates & Co,, Toronto, 


po mart ate wk mm om 


Sel a aera 


in}: remot 


| know 


by the disappearance of the I] 


Prien 
Mine 

Friend 

Mine host; “Cortainiy, only ‘this 

ond ove is on men,” | 

| 

| 


“How do you like that?” ] 
host: “Delicious! | 
“Let us have another.” | 


sec- 


Friend: “Muke no nilstake my boy; 
they-ore both on you. T've ne. money 

It ia the anexpected that happens—ce 
pecially in Huwiti the unknown.—Henry 
Sandham, in—Harper's—Magazine: 


relations 
theme 
Berlin 


with  Anstriadiun 
of much 
Politlea! 


Germany ‘st 
y are the 


comment in 


newspaper 
clrelek re-} 


really intimate. 


NO.CURE FOR 
BRIGHT’S DISEASE 
In its Advanced ‘Stages -~Why? 
The Only Hope is Early Treat- 


ment with Dr. Chase’s Kidney- 
Jiver Pilea 0 “ 


To understand ‘Bright's Disease is 
thet io 
past. the oh 


to 
ite advanced stages it te 
of human ald. colle 
of the k * Ondergo a wasting change, 
which leayes them dead so fur ae per- 
forming their functions is coneerned, 

What o terrible death! Just think of 
having the kidneys dead, Think of the 
poisons Jeft In the system when these 
organs coukd no longer perform thelr du- 
ties as fiters of the blood, 

It would be difficult to concelye. of any 
thing more dreadful, and yet thie ie the 
goal to which every case of neglected kid 
rey disease must lead, 

When the back ach when urinating 
is difficult or too frequer when there are 
deposits tn the urine after atanding for 24 
heures, there le no time to loge in procuring 
Iv. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, 

It is not claimed that they will cure 
Bright's, Disense in ite last stages. They 
ore ab absolute. cure for kidney disease, 
and so long ap the kidneys are not entirel 
wasted away they will give new strengt 
and vigor and enable them to resumé thetr 
duties of fitertng the biood. 

Dr. Chase's Kidbey-Liver Pilla_will_ stop 
heckache and headache tn short order by 

the—cause, and will positively 
right’s Disesse. One pil a dose: 


prevent 
3 At all dealers, or ng0n, 


25e, a box. 


-In faet, thie te the first time «I 
soon a railroad in forty-five yeara, 
wut to the Pacific coast In "SI 
in California 
ruilroads. This ta my first teip down from 
Cariboo in 17. yeark- Tn the spring of 1800 
1 was with the tiret pack train that crossed 
at The pack 
train were with to Kirk 
patrick, still resident of vicinity 
Wwe then on Horsetly 
Hen. Ingram. Moore, and Archie 
Kotherfor, discovered the 

brated the summer of 
’ on Horvefly, now 
rhe ftret 


work! 
have 


havitig come 


ln my 


thue there Were 00 


the Thompaon lin mouth 


Bedonged 


this 


we 


were our way to 


James 


having then 


Bine Lead in 


prospect. obtained was 


’ fA YY FRE PRE pe Rae deena reece: 
of which he is tying at bis-fath-| Anstrin-Hungary; tespite the -coptinuing-of | « rocker and srashed’ S buckets of gravel 
ue aider street, -suffer= ie wew “alias, ae iving ~cowsed -tom te 


wd gor set Whew 
in ‘the company. Some went 
and some went 


were 
up the river prospect 
down, When they returned showed 
them otir prowpects and‘ next day we all 
started to work Mth Hep Ingram as our 
foreman, Quite a sumber of this, ¢ 
pany were well known to old timers. Den- 
ule Crave waa drowned on the steamer 
Pacific; Mike Keenat, familiarly known as 
“Old Dad Keenan,” who died a few years 
ago, T think be was stopping at the the 
with his old friend Johnny Wilson; Hew 
fograin dled at” Grand” Pranes Tai, Me 
Clelland, afterward ‘discoverer of MeClel- 
land guich, Montana, was thrown from 9 
horse and killed; I think Archle Ruther: 
ford died in Vietoria; Col, Dixon Med three 
years ago tn Alaska; John Melean ie at 
the mouth of Quewnelle; Joseph Patterson, 
known as [itiana Jo, is now a resident of 
the state of [iinots; T. 8 Bil, Jim Wal 
don, Ole Lioyd, of Texas, and Jim Some- 
thing, I now forget what, T have lost track 
of those inet four, and James Moore, 4 
reeident of Queanelle Forks. 

The above then briefly deseribes the 
firat digcoveties made in the Horsefy camp. 
It is suffictent to add that early timers 
worked the rich surface gravel, and gradu- 

Ohlnese acquired holdings,-and It is 
tio that they #lonie took out 

over $500,000 working. in’ thelr primitive 
way only a few acres of surface and to a 
depth of byt a few feet os a rule. ‘Com- 
Uined With ti aAwounts taken off ‘by enrly 
time white miners, and the faot that no 
year hae pessed since “9 but that more or 
Was gold has been taken out, lt scems only 


There 
to 
we 


| 
and } 
it is ovly a matter of work to strike a pas | 


we—steuck—Hureeds.|- 


lagt 
kx, the returns for the season will 
and satisfy the own 
on the Lorne was 
Was quite 
nets have 


they undoubiedly will, as good as the 
| few w 
}reneh a goml Ogure 
ets When the bond 
dropped last spring, it 
| couragement, but the 
and with the crade method of an arrastra 
have —grennd the free mliling rock, and 
from about six weeks actial work, aver 
aging a ton a day, haye secured over 


$2,500,—Littooet Prospector, 


a die 


got in 


ow 


PEASANTS SIMPLE STORY. 


foe —o— 
| She Tells How She Found 
Czarewiteh. 
pe sep heat 
Anna Dassojewa, 

of Abbas Toman, 

witch pass away, furnishes # movi cf 
It appears 


the Dying 


the woman 


who saw the © 


peasant 
re- 


| fecting narrative of his end 
that the Czarewitch's motor tricycle was 
going ot a great pace when he eaught 
was the milk 


up, to a cart in whieh 
Cracewiteh 


woman Dassojewa. “The 
signaled ahi the cart drew aside to let 
| him pass, The Czarewitch bowed, smi 
ed and proceeded. Ten minutes loter 
 Dassojewa noticed the Czarewitch retard 
ing very slowly, The story, best related 
in her own simple way, is as follows 
“I. cannot forget it. I see it before 
we now, Thet® he comes, “The beve- 
| factor. Back on bis machine, Quite 


i 
| 
} 


0 Lae ATO, _ nent —hare—hae thie artificial 


Reese e et eet] 
-§ SOKTIFIG FORMATION. 
Lge iiaete ea Wcertene 


‘ 
| Phe origin of the diamond is an nm. 
solved mystery to which much théughet 
is being given, Small. diamomis have 
been found in the méteosie irom of the 
Canon Diablo, Arizona, and M, Motjssan 
has formed them ‘artificially im the heat 
and pressure of molten iren suddenly 
cooled from the outside, “It has beep 
inferred that the diamond of South 


‘ Mfrien were fornia? in motten iron at 


great depths and: umler great pressure 
and brought uy volcanic action into thé 
silicate rock above, Herr J, Priedland- 
,@ thinks this improbable, as he has sue- 
ceeded in producing artificial diamond# 
ac normal pressure by fusing olivine in 
contact with graphite; and he notes that 
the same materiils are present in the 
molten silicate and carbonaceous shales 
of South Africa, . Prof. T, G. Bonney 
shows that the famous “blue grownd"’ te 
not the original diamond bearing: rock, 
aa’ it cotains water-worn — fragments, 
and proves to be true brectia, made up 
of both crystalline and sedimentary rocks 
that have been shattered and then joined 
by solfataric action, 

a | 

The ‘double currents of the Bosphoras 
and other straits have been jnwestignat- 
ed by Vice-Admiral 8, Makaroff. There | 
currents..are due chielly.to_the varying 
salinity of the water, and are sometimes 
& surface aad a bettom current and 
sometimes opposite surface currents, .The | 
specific gravity afd temperature differ) 
fo much in different parts of the Straits} 
of Formbsa- that they may safely guide. 
the sailor through the dangerous passage 
in, thick weather, A regular tempera-* 
tnre service for these waters is therefore-| 
ci cestied, with. pilot beapite te asoertati| 
the temperataré dally at definite poines + 
and telegraph it te Chinese and Japanese | 
ports;-omd it-is believed that many ships : 
would thus be saved, Admiral Makaroff | 
alxo urges of” systematic temperature 
study of all seas, the work to be diyid 
eld among the great_aations. 

. . * 

Ta an late casé. 2 convalescent trom 
typhoid fever and even! 
afotee!. from sleep. by pala two mo 
lars when hungry, instant “relief follow 
ing the.taking of food. 

**-e 

We have meteorites of, ginss, as well 
as of stone and_iron, if the recent com + 
chwions of tain European. geologists 
are to be a¢eépted, The glasny stones 
of Bohemia, known as moblavite, re- 
vembting the obsidiwn bombs of Anstra- 
Ha, have been a puazle to scientific men, 
but-have heen explained? ty some authors | 
as being relies-of prehistoric gtees monn. | 
facture, Late experiments by Herr J. | 


Bareé have “shown that these objects | 


was annoyed 


The new theory that they are aerolites fing | 
heen advanced by Dr. F. E. Suess, who 
finds many analogies “to support this | 
view, and points expecially to the. sur- | 
face. structure, which conld not have 


Other geplogists are adding facts. econ- | 
firming the theory. Herr. Woldrich 
peints ont, however, that it is remark- 
able that these stones, whether in Nu- 
rope or elsewhere. are only known to oc- 
eur in samy deposite. 
* * * < 
The highest scientific sceuraecy 
reached only by corrections for both ob- 
server and instrument. “The effect of 
temperature changes onthe great—Yer- 
kes telescope hax been studied by Pro- 
feseor Barnard lia temperatre range 
of 102 deg., and he finds that the ob-! 
ject glass may be shortened over a quar- 
ster of an inch more than the tube that 
carries it, producing «a cliange of focus 
that appreciably_ affecta star nieasure 
ment. He conclyges that for such ex- 
net work parallax, the minute 
changes large ‘Inetruments due to 
temperature, should be determined and 
taken into account 
. . . 


in 


Astunishing effects. of scale and oil ib 
boilers were shown in recent tests before | 
the French Society for the Encourage} 
mention of National Industry A hailt- 
inch steel plate, covered with water mn- | 
side was heated outside by a blowpipe | 
flume, and under the flercest tempe ra- | 
ture it was only moderately heated so | 
long as it was kept clegn, bad the thin | 
nest layer of scale or of organic fatty | 
matter on the inside caused it quickly td 


| G4,000 mere. 


————— 


< c 
wi £ 


ORDI | 


—— pra 


Hullo! «a new printing Orm? No, 
Mehing Co. is taking; you see so many 


CHA 


Nic 


ala 


Corperation, Limited. 


that Je the name the Province Pub- 
people thought, on account of the 


similarity of names, that "The Province newspaper was connected with us, 


that we had to a 


wo all mr the fine, During the taet 

toria, we have added to our plant: (1). A 
modern appliances, 
ly new outfit of type, with all the latest 
® Wittle go we sold ft 40 the foundry). 

(Our old one coulda’t keep op wih the 
A lpotype for job work only. 


news rivals don't like to see us so busy 
saying we are becoming a Vancouver & 
WHY we have practically a con 
employ gree 0 hands here. THA’ 


over a week. 


‘Province Publishing Co., Ld, Ly. 


iN’ THE OLD CHURCH; BUT 


lf to the courts for divorce even of 
our name we are-at the same time doubling our capital, 
year, in our head office here;ip Vie- 


(2) A new up-to-date color printing press, 


(4) A hew.and more powerful engine, 
aT ee increase of busin 
0 r the above looks like business falll 

doesn't It, eh? Why WE have no complaint ‘to make—every month is * 
leetic bigger ‘than the last, and still we are ready for more, 


letely new plant he 
'S WHY we pay in wages alone in Victoria 


me. While changin; 
iness has increased 
completo binding plant with all 
() An entire 
styles, (Our old type was,.wearing 


ote., ote.) 15) 
oft, 
ust a 
Some of our busl- 
and try to detach. our custor 

rm. -OF COURSE we are, 


THAT'S WHY we 


WITH NEW MACHINERY. 


»—1 1899 lkx+~« 


pose rereseosocos 


Provinetal 


Exhibition 


UNDER THE AUSPICES OF 


The Royal Agricultural and Industrial Sceiety of British Columbia 


WILL BE HELD AT 


New Westminster 


October 3rd, 


men § 15,000 5-——- 


4th, 5th-and-6th 


——ZOPEN TO THE WORLD 


HIRSE RACES, AQUATICS, 
BICYCLE RA E3, 


CHAMPIOnS AIP LACROSSE, CYMKHANA, 


WAVAL @ND MILITARY SPORTS, 


been proton bp TR MORE Weer LA. .Round my Pleasure for Four..Whole Days. 


BASEBALL, 
FOOTBALL, 
BAND TOURNAMENT 


MAGNIFICENT ILLUMINATIONS. 


and ¢ tt each evening. 


Hone, 
features see small handbills. 
FAecutive—His Worship 
Drynmiver, k. I. Anderson, 
Por Prize 


TRAPT, 
resident, 


Special att 


Mayor Ovens, 
Ald, J, F._Scott, 
Forms, and fu | 


Lists, Entry 


Monster Excursions from all points, at 
No entragee fee charged for Exhibits, 


T. J. 


ARTHUR: MALINS, w. 


raction at the New Westminster Optra 
greatly reduced rates. For special 


Tra w. d. 
Ald. M. Sinclair, 


1 particulars, Write to 


Mathers, Ged. D. 


H. KEARY, 
Commissioner. 


nually, which is nearly double the num- 
ber ki in‘the Franco-ierman war, 
Tuberculosis is responsible for 160,00 
deaths annually, and. typhus fever, 
nieasies, searlatina, whooping cough, 
smalipox, diphtheria, puerperal fever, for 
without counting oceasi 
ravages. of cholera and plagne, M, 
diffred. of Loire, is raising money 
scientific warfare against contagion 
hy aK 


ext 


Acil anhydrous, hyposniphate of soda, 
used in an cight per cet, solution, is a 
new fixing sult of French photograph’ 
ere : 


The German’ press is full of comments 
Samoa 


Purest, Best 
aad most varied ¥ 
Enamelled. Ware made ¥ 
in Canada is the famed 


“CRESCENT” 


_eontinnalls—spitting,_le wis 
not yet quite close to -me when he ap 
} peared as. if, sitting on his machine, be 
swayed backwards and forwards. es! 
Now | think to myself it is becuse of 
bis spitting. He first tarned bis head 
to ope side and then to the other. Sud 
denly I see how all at once he sinks en 
one side, then straight again and 
then falls so much én one side that he 
seoms going to fall quite off. 1: think 
somethings wrong here, . Either the mn- 
chine’® Bpoitt” or something Wat 
I think | will jump down fromthe eart, 
So [ jump down and, at the same mo- 


sits 


else 


known, @s the ven | eae pale, sa pale that I cannot com- 


mre it to anything, he nearly falls off 
Rie WR AT aE TT PY te 
trond. 

“~~ Poenrt onrtain my eet eager, Ly -a- 
simple womnn; was certainly timid about 
speaking to him, dut it iu as if somebody 
Rays to mef ‘Go near him, go near him.’ 

“| do not know where I got the cour: 
age, but I came near and, just then, he 
fell into;my bandas, hic eyes wide open, 
He look at me, and _over bis face fly- 
little spots. 
another; they meet and look 
at the littl spots on his brow, Thea 
also 1hold bis hand, His nails seem 
fo grow. darker, His eyes seem to be 
lopking at me and yet. he 4 not see 
me. “His lips are bathed in blood, He 
sighs and one-hears as if something is 
bubbling like when water bolls. 

“I ran to my cart, selxed an empty 
piteher and drew water, — 

“ ‘Drink,’ Tsay, and he raises bis hand 
just a little, 

“When I put the jug to his mouth it 
seems to me he has clenched bis teeth 
and so I do not hear a word from him. 
I saw his arms became weak and drop- 
ped like whips. It seemed to grow dork 
before my eyes, I do not know what to- 
do, I -seream! LT weep aloud, but he 
turns bis head a little on one side and 
seoms as if he were still looking at me. 

“At last, I do not know how it came 
about, but I offer to rum as fast as I 
ean in the direction of the castle, and 
L ery aloud for help.” 

Daxkojewa, still hoping to save the 
Caurewitch,teft-him on the ground and 
ran to the Cossick sentinels at the pal- 
ace, When assistance arrived “the Oxare- 
witch was dead, 


grow. I 


berome red—and_ dangeroyely hot, even 
when covered with water, —| 
. | 
{u a comparison of simHar magnets | 
made from. different kinds of steel; Herr | 
A. Abt + found that the wolfram stew! 
magnets are much the most powerful— 
twice ax powerful, in fact, as any others, 
This steel, however, rapidly its 
magnetiam, 26. per cent. having been} 
lost in 122 days. : 
* + 2 


loses 


~ An isthect that can count—atleast ap to | 
six—is the curious discovery with which 
Lieut.-Col. Delaancey, . of the French 
Arwy, credits “himself. The. creature is 
Tie Remget rte, aytetert wer eter cet nce. eneedy: 
Jong, ond wis seen in a garden. of Nou 
nea, New Galvlonia,- attention being at- 
tracted by ita singular turning on its own 
head asa pivet while resting on a ba- 
mum leaf, After o patke of a quarter 
of an hotr the mevements began agai 
when the-observer was able to make the 
following record; Six turns In the di. 
rection of the bands of a witel, the) a 


One little spot trickles, then wstop: six tarns in the opposite direction, 


a stop: five torns in the first direction, 
a atop, and so on in’ descending order 
uot finally one turn was made in each 
direction. Then. the insect stopped, re- 
maining still immovable at ‘the end of 
an. hour. Only two specimenta of the 
insect were found, and both were un 
fortunately oat, The mysterious count- 
jug was observed on only one oechsion. 
9- os 

The most offective purifier. of Water 
found by Prof, Berge, of Brussele Int 
versity, is a mixture of two volumes 
of oxyzem, with one of chlorine This 
gas is formed by the decomposition of 
chlorate of potash by sulphuric achl by 
n density of 1.71, and in contact with 
wote? the chie acid formed becomes 
doecomposel with palozone and water: the 
former boing soluble in water but decom. 
posed hy light and heat and by ¢on- 
tact with organic matter, Poloxzone is 4 
more energetic oxidieer than, even orone. 
Tt destroys micro-organiems and kill 
toxins, yet fisher In water charged with 
ite are unharmed, mnd the growth of 


pinnt. is unaffected. 
“*-. 


Ti Pranee contarions— digesses claim 
an average of about 240,000 victims an- 


} thie axsault on Jerday possible, 


segarding wi The Kreutz Zeltung 
says the Samoa question fs not an o mt 
of -euffedontimportuuce for Germany 
make lf a critieal polat of her policy 
tnt 1 


‘iermany 


to 
The 
article, 
is mak 


powers over every | 


 Gaxette, tn” aH 
notion that 
of all-the 


Afference 


cules the 
enemles 
tng 
A man ranie 
Magistrate De 


McElvey appeared before 
Torotto Satur. | 
Wty on the charge of stabbing Jordan, } 
a fellow prisdner, in the Friday | 
right ‘The jaw prohibiting —the—poltce; 
fr searching prisoner in the celle made 
Col. Den 

He said 


and anless re. 


lsow at on 


M. 


cells on 


ebergetionlly denounced i 


was an outrage, 


| 

| 
sun | 
suthia law } 


etitherbeantrne dd  crtuemcls gene Ot eID - 


Tr Lies’ 


1 need |* 


‘yea heads are better than one. 
one . 
give you 


rou dave is dull and heavy 
Hood's Sarsaparilia t will 


\ ta relief. 


“LAND REGISTRY ACT.’ 

la the Matter of the Application of The 
Kokstiah Quer: Company, Uimired 
Liability. for a 
ible Tithe to the Kast half of Sections 
Six @ and Seven (7), Range Seven 
(VIL) Quamieban District, and the 
pont half of Section Bix (6> Range 
Bight (VIL) Qoamichan District, ex- 
eepe “part” “ROHS, THEPEST, whiten 
was by deed dated 18th December, 1895, | 
conveyed to The Bequimalt: ant Nanal- | 
mo Rallway Company. 

Notice is hereby given that tt te my: In- 
tention to issne a Certificate of Indefeas 
fhte Tithe to the above tnnds to The Kok- 
silab Quarry Company Limited Liabit'ty 
on the lat.day of Member next, unless 
the meantime a valid objection thereto De 
mate to me in writing hy some person 
buving on estate or interest therein, oF lo 
some part thereof. 


STORE STEET, VICTORIA, B.C. 


@___)PEN FROW'B P.M, to 10 PM 
pe Sa hs 
a temperance rv. 


} 
| Im the matter of 
Jertificate Of Indefeas- |p } 


Steel Agate Ware. — 


Every. article which can be 
made in this class of goods [i 
ismade—and every AQ 
spiece is guaranteed— 
by the 


ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. 
in the Sonrgme < Sart of British 


the goods of Adolphus 
Urvalek, deceased, tutestate, and In the 
ier of the “Oficial Adu pistrajors® 
Notice ls hereby given that under an or 
der granted -by the Honorable Mr> Justice 
Drake, dated the 4th day of August, 1809, 
the undersigued was appointed administra~ 
ter of all and singular jhe goods, chattels 
and credits of the above, deceased. 

Persons having claims againet the estate 
of the snid decdased are requested to send 
the -partioulars thereof on or before the 
4th day of September, 1800, abd all pet 
sons indebted to the said deceased are re 
quired to pay such Indebtedness te me 


forthwith, 
WM. MONTRITE, 
Oficial Aduslalbgeutor, 


PONS ASSESS EERIE LS AN LR BE REE UN CS sr ARI tne A he 


. 


Siesta ieee - encarta 


SOMERS AINE essary ta ncmetennorsp 


, 


arpa arene ae ape teen a 
unbatinaeiitienenss essere _ Aine 


ot 


ee ees 


VICTORIA DAILY ‘TIMES, MONDAY, -AvGUST: 14, 1899, 


GH. Mumm’s “Extra Dry” 


OO0000 


NLY the first pressings of the best grapes from 


the choice 


st vineyards 
District-are used by G. H. Muni & Co, in-the-com- 


THE GREAT LEADER OF ALL CHAMPAGNES. 


in. the 


STCODDGOOOVON COICO OUT O 


Champagne 


x 


MPORTS OF CHAMPAGNE 


from-Januarytst-to-July_tst, 1899. 


position of their cuves, and no other Champagne, no 


matter what the price, 


AL 


WARRAI 


can excel in quality.. 


TS 


have 


Her Majesty the Queen of England, 


His Royal Highness the 
Majesty: the 
Majesty the Emperor of Austria, 


His 
His 


His Majesty the 


His 
His 


Majesty the 
Majesty the 


German Emperor,’ 


King 
King 


of the Belgians, 
of Denmark, 


been granted to 


OY 
jd Messrs. ‘G. H. Mumm & Co: as purveyors to 


Prince of Wales, 


King-of Sweden and Norway. » 


Heidsieck & Co\....--.. 
Piper Heidsieck ...)... 
Louis Roederer... -\, 
Vve. Clicquot & 
Ruluart, Rere & Fits 
Perrier-Jouet 
Ernest trroy & Co +-. 
Delbeck & Co.. 
A. DeMontbelto ‘ Co. 
Bouche, Fils & Co: 
St. Marceaux : 

- Theophite Roederer : 
Various Brands (15 or more). 


Compiied from Custom House Records. 


into the United 
States by the sole agents of the warious, brands 


he IS owing to the great skill and knowledge in com- 

posing the cuves, combining quality, purity and 
._Matural.dryness with the smallest-percentage. of alcohol, 
“that G. H. Mu mM & Co, have gained for their Extra 
Dry such a wonderful appreciation and demand over 
all other brands. 


2 
s 


SSRS.G. H. MUMM & CO. always 


M 


carry 


an-immense:stock, having made it a rule to 


buy very largely of fine vintages in order to tide over 
the poorer ones, which accounts for the uniformity and 


excellence of their justly celebrated Extra Dry, 


8. 890 
128, 175 


and 


we are pleased to state that they are enabled to supyly 
all demands, however large, while maintaining the same 


high character and spaatty: of their Wine: 


GIDOISOGODOGOGOD OOOO OOH OO DODOOOSOOOOOODOD0 DO DC000" Oo. recs DOOSGHOOOOO DOO OOO00000 GOOGOOOO SOD OS OD OOO GU 00000 DODO DDO OOOO 000000 OOO D000OK 3000000000000 00000 C0000 00000 D000 DO 0D0O0O00000. 0600 


SZ 


Ease 


& 


The Schools 


~ Re-Opened 


Encouraging Attendance at the | 


First Day's Session of the 
Schools, 
Some Alterations in the Cur- 
riculum and Teaching 
Staff. 


The public schools of the city re-opened 
this morning for the autumn term with a 


> com modious 
Mr. Russell's class room hae been. enturged | 


‘00d —attentance—ot—puptis—consitering + 


the fact that this is the first-day: Supt 
Eaton madé gp tour of the different 
schools this forenoon and found every- 
thing satisfactory, 


A number of changes have been made | 


in the teaching staffs. Miss Grant has 
been moved from Hillside school to the 
North Ward, and Miss Marchant, a new 
appointee, is also posted ‘to this school, 
Two géntlemen, Messrs. Winsby, of the 
Korg’ Central, and Talt, of the North 
Ward sims, have been transferred Co | 
yet Paghisn Dien A. i Prager, a ne 
appointee, is also placed, in- Somth Park 
Misses Robinson and Brown, of the 
Wark wtaff, go to the, Girls’ Central, while 
Mr. Clark, sho. jJolmed the stat at 
sumer, succeeds Mr. Wineby at the 
Roys’ Central, .At Victoria West, the only 
chaige is the appelatment. of Miss Barron 
ef the Girls’ Central, to Miss 
(arrie Christie. who’ goes to Spring Ridge. 
At the latter #cliool thé Staff ia Increased 
from three to four. 


an OCwed 


A change In'the status of Hillside avenne | 


takes place by detactlag it from the North 
Ward with which it was formerly identi, 
Hed, and making It 4 we parate school, with 
Mise Bincktwell n# principal, Miss Harrap, 
of the North Ward, being the only addi- 
tion to the s@tafl. Miss Lawson, of the 


_.ddeuth Park school. becomes principal of | 


the Kingston street: seliool, 
given fadependent standing. Mise F. 
Praser, of the South Park schowl-is Miss 
Lawson's assistant. Both of the two last 
mamed schoyls consist of - only primary 
pupils, aod will be feeders to North Ward 
and South Park Another change 
fa that priuwry pupils Hying tn 


which also ia 


Spring 


» Ridge district are required to attend there, 


Improvements’ lave been effected In a 
nambr of the school buildings. The High 
school, which has suffer in the past 
from tack of ventilation and of adequate 
means of exit and entrance, has been re 
novathd and these defects removed. Separ- 
ate .emtrances ore provided for the boys 
and giris, and over that 
lobby has been vonstructed. 


and @ barrow hallway removed 


Spring Ridge schoolhouse as been paint. | 


@d and kajeomined, the exterior painted 
and sewerage connection made tn the out- 
bulldings. 

The flat roofed addition In the front of 


South | 


’ 
made 


of the latter a/ 


gee We have lust recelved 1,000 cases, three carloads, of the. above Celebrated Champagne. aml 


° 
ay a ay AY». 
SAS GaSe 


y Ae Gs 


the South Park building has-been treated | 


to a steep reef te overcome the secuwala 


Uen of snow, ecoustructed | 
er the 
radical depertere hes been made in 

i ake upon the provision that the num 
ber of poplis in each room must pot be 
less than 45 of than 55. Another | 
opted is that promotions may take’ 
time, and the general record i 
of the pupil is taken inte consideration In | 
that » than the result of 
So examination There has also been a j 
ib Hiedifiewtion ithe course of studies: “tat 
secure greater proficiency iu reading, writ | 
t 


sud a new porch 
main entrapee, 


more 
| rule 


lace at any 


connection 


ing and arithmetic tn the Junior (asses. 
"A acute of has - be 
adopted as follows 

of primary $4) to F | 
| Teach’s of intermediate classes 540 to w | 
Teacher of grammar classes,. Gite we) 
| Principals are remunerated sccording to | 

with an addition of from 


teachers’ salaries 


| Teachers classes 


the same scak 
"F108 to S300. 

4 

The attendance at the North Ward school | 


_Pither & Leiser, on Agents for Columbia, 


VES p FD Sp sibs Pa: AIO PTS RN Alp sae oe AY b a ADs A, > AD, y 
iS SAS av als as as cis Gs ae ap as as oe ae Ge Gis Gs G See: iki Cy as ¢ 
S9OSLS OOS OESOHS SOFSHS SIFTS OSESHSEESOED 


epee 


RIUTINY OR A TRANSPORT, 


Crew of the United States Steamer Refuse to 
Work—Tried by Court Martial and 
Seat to Prisea. 


te 


ig 


| 

THE GU } 

THE LIVE BIRD SHOOT. 

The 
live pigeon hoot at i 


Vieteria Gun Club held a successfal 


(Associated Press.) 
Langford Plains yes 


San Franciseg. Cal, Aug. 14.~From | 
brought here by the trafisport 
Centeniial it is believed the transport 
Warren, bringing the Colorado regiment, 
which salted. from Maniia-en-July 16th, 
and which. was expected here on Wed- 
will not this port 
before‘ Eriday ‘ 
After—tdusing Manila the Warren can 
, in a typhoon, which battered her up 
conskierably, and also had to fice a mu- | 
ting among lier men, As a result 24 of 


terday. Fifteen pigeons were shot for, th 


rewult in order of the scores being as fol- advices 


Short 

Miekford 

" 

Short 
i... Mal.ure.. 
Chas, Minor 
) Weller 
Cupt. 


The tie hetweon. Mesure’ Gregy and Shor 


* | nestlay next, reach 


1260020016211 1-— 


i 
Seara ...20221022010000Wm8 


| and General Mercier was obliged to go 


» A>, 


~ 2854 


BAP ar eh Ram ee 
y AW, Aa A, see A. AVA. A>. fy!Z UA SRA 
re] SERS Ea seaneaas <IS<E 
Gas Gas ay Gas © es Sirisc uss as OAS 


~DREVFUS'S COUNSEL si, ‘The Dawson Fire. 


Continved from page 1.) 


Jouauste Visits Latori. 

Rennes, Aug. 14.—At 2 o'clock this 
afternoon the doctors“aho had left M. 
» Labori sotne time bef§re, were hastily | 
summoned to atte nd the patient. , 
Colonel Jomauste called after the} 
close of the sessio.. of the court, .and| 
was allowed ty see M. Labori. He ex 
pressed his deepest regret at the 
currenee, 

General Mercier followed, but-the doc- 
tors declared M. Labori could not bear 
such an interview in his present state, 


without seeing the wounded man. 
The Counsel Threatened. 
Rennes; Aug. 14.—A correspondent of 

the Associated Press called at the resi- 


away 


A LESSON TO 


Before concluding any arrangement 
Dawson, please write or give.us a call. 


tons were sent down to Dawson in our 
loss or accident. Cattle shipped in this 


the beat possible condition. for making good beef. 
if necessary, your own: dwelling, and you ¢ 


have your own warehouse, and, 
your goods when you are ready and not 
dollars for teaming, storage &c., 


Insurance en route on cargo may be effected at our office if you eo desire 


wish to make rapid time we will arrange 
Verify these facts before shipping’ 
Lumber, boats and metchandise of 
at Bennett Lake. 


VICTORIA-YUHON 


MILES AT BENNETT, # C, 


BRANCH” OFFICE, DAWSON, —N: w. 7, 


PASSENGERS. 


By using 
freight for very much less than what steamboats would charge you. 


BE LEARNED. 


for shipping your freight from Bennett to 

our arges you can carry your 
Two thousand 
barges during the season of 1898 without 
way arrive without loss of. weight and in 
On your arrival at- Dawson you 
ab more 
before. This may save you hundreds of 


while at the same time you run no Msk from fire. 


If you 
& tow for you paat the lakes. 

sour freight and it- wil? save’ you money 
all kinds constantly on hand at our m'‘ils 


TRADING CO., Ld., 


HEAD ‘OFFICE, BROAD STREET. 
VICTORIA, B.C. 


loslay wae 203, abd at Hilisidecavenue 117. | 


DISORDERLY STUL DEN" 


com 
Iu Russia Will Be Compelled to Serve in 


the Army. 


ai 
(Associated Presa.) | 

London, Aug. 14.—The-St. -Petersburg | 
correspondent of the Times says | 
j 

| 

' 

i 


“tt has been decided “by “the govern- | 
ment that’ hereafter any mniversity or 
high school stident creating or instigat 
| ing disorders shall be forcibly drafted 
| Tato” the “ariny” wwed-campelied.ta..render., 
from one tothree years service, It - would 
| be interesting fo know. whether the new 


bl regahitien- aril die apphed to foreige stu. 


| dents. For instanee, last- year, during 
the university, troubles, dn American 
student complained to the United States 
émbassy of ill-treatment at the hands 
= the police.” 
: CPR. DIVIDEND. 
—_—o— 
(Assoctated Preag.) 

Montreal, Amg. 14.—At a meeting of 
the board of d rs of the Canadian 
Pacific Raitway Company held - to-day, 
a divislend of two per cent,.on the pre 

| ferred stock and two per cent, on the 
common stock for the half year ended 


‘October 2nd. 


| MONTREAL MINING MARKET, 


——o— 
(Assoctated Press.) 
| Montreal, Ang. 14.—Stock market: 
morning tyurd: War Engle 365, sO; 
¥ ayne 140, 135; Montreal and Londom 
48; Republic 125, 124). Sales; He- 
public 1,000 at 124, 500 at 1245: Mont- 
real and London 1,400 at 45, 200 at 46, 
1,000 at 40% 500 at 47%, as at 48; 
Payne 2,000 at 135. 


~ THE BEST “REMEDY FOR FAUX, 


Mr. John Mathing, a well-known stock J 
dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says: “After. suffer: 
ing for over’w week with flax, and my phy- 
*ician having falled to relieve mre, I was 
| advised to try Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera 
ond” Dlarrhoea** Remedy, and have thé 
| Pleasure of stating’ that the half of one 

bottle cured me." For'sale by Henderson 

trou, Wholesale Agents, Victoria and 

Vancot rer, 


ference ot 


hire SOC Tie Wie Wehired payable on | 


for the medal was then shot off; Tesulting t wore 
in a victory for the former. President 
Delinia, of the Humane Society, was pre 
but there waa no occasion .for’ Inter 
bis part. 

eee 

CRICKET. 
FIFTH TEST MATCH. 


(Associated Presa.) 


soteiced to terns Varying from 
three months to two years, and the Wur 
; ren is sailing for San Francisco. with a 
green crew of Filipinos. 

The mutiny was brought about by one 
of the men clsiniing he was sick and re- 
fusing to work, He was placed in irons. 
| Every man in the crew them quit work, 
| and declared that they would not resume 

London, Aug. 14.—The fifth and last test until ther comrade was released and 
crieket match between the Australian and | sent to the howpltal. 
English élevens began at Kensington | All were court 
Oval this morning in the presence of 90,- tented as above 
000 spec tators. England won the toss and —— 
went to bat. Wher afr aajenriment wart FRaSEO news AMD THE WARK - 
made for tuncheon—the-home team hadi. SIDE.” ! 
Scored 4? runs with no wickets dows = a — : 

= Why should not an artist paiva the’ 


dark side of life?_That was a question | 
put_to M. Verestchagin, the great Ros- 
sian painter, by a “Young Man" répre-! 
sentative, and the reply was: 

Why —not- indeed? You—do- not~ object 
when an author gives you the dark side 
of life in a book; why, then,’should the 
artist be Hmitéd in his choice of a. sub- 
ject? You may say you prefer to look | 
on a picture which thrills you with pa- | 
; triotism, -or ona pretty scene whieh 
| moves you to goble thoughts and ele 
| gests no ung easant reflections, But 

it is not the UsINERS part wol- an artint-| 

to paint thingejas they are—to give you 

& photograph df things exactly as they 

happen—not to gloss them over with the 

brightest colors in his box of painte. 

M. Verestchagin has been blamed for | 

Heing a sensationalist, but that tg be-| 

cause he had the courage to paint war 
| as it is, 

His Studio and His Friends, 


The artist jg jow in Moscow, where he 
| Spends his life With his wife and family, | * 
exeept. When ig busy in Paris, Fis | 
studio in Pa r outside Paris, get 
—is one of the largest in Europe, 4 
Was here that he painted the Prince sal 
WwW. ales on an elephant—one of many In- 
dian ‘pictures be has given us. Ver-! 
| estehagin counts the Prince among his 
| pérronal friends... Sometimes a military 
| Visitor will *hint to the artist that it is! 
not wise-to-let the people’ know all the 
truth, and at such times Verestchagin | 
J. T. Sullivan, wife aud two children, of listens. patiently, and then, shrugging | 
Trall, are at the Dominion. They . are | his shoulders, reconsecreates bis artist's’ 
spending a couple of weeks holidaying at Vow, and mutters to himself, “But know | 
the Coast, ‘ i av. the trdth they shell,” 


sent 


martialled and sen 


== | 


-—o— 
YACHTING, 
THE SHAMROCK’S SPARS. 


Aug. 14.—The Anchor tine | 
sieamor . Purnassia, which arrived tfiis | 
worntng from Hasguw | and Movitle 
brought racing spard, rigging and gear of 
Sir Thomas Lipion’s yacht Shamrock ‘The 
apeds were wrapped in canvas, lashed se 
eurely to the forward deck, and sumber 
eleven pleces, 


New York, 


—_o— 
THE RIFLE. 
THE TEAM FOR OTTAWA. 


The Fite Tar WHI Will reprosent This 
provinee ot the D. BR. A. meeting lodves 
for the Bast?to-night, and will. participate 
in the 0. BR. A. at Toronto before taking 
in the larger meet, 

The Victoria métbera are 
tiee, Corp. Richardson, Bomb 
Sergt. MeDongall. 


Sergt. 
Bodley 


Let 
and 


STPAMER SUNK. 


——s 
(Associated Press.) 

“London, Aug. 14.—A’ despatch from 
Calentta says the surveying steamer? 
Resolute was sunk in collision with the 
British steamer Scindia, last reported 
froin Calcutta on July 9th for Bombay, 
Several lives were lost. 


Rocky -Mountalti locusts are reported tu 
Dave appeared ton Southern Manitoba. 

Harry Warden was - killed “by lightning + 
near Picton the other night. 


tthe Warren screw arterwent trated thence of at habort-again—at 


| Raturday—Pither & Leiser, 


patients condition, it was said, had 
his agony increased-and a 
fever had set in. The doctors in at- 
tendance are very, anxious. He ia con- 
scious and talks to his wife freely, but 
hie remarks are all-about the court 
martial, 

It appears that Labori yesterday re- 
ceived two letters threatening he would 
be shot. He treated, them, as he had 
treated others of a similar nature, which 
he received frequently for months past, 
with contempt. 


The 


grown worse, 


—oO— _- 
A Néw Publication tdicativé of the 
—Growth .and- importance. of the 


Terminal City 


Mr. Rowland E. Green, of Vancouver, 
has compiled a new. directory of the Ter- 
minal City, which is published by the 
News-Advertiser, ifid ts a Very coniplete 
and creditable work. 

r, Green claims for Vancouver a popu- 
lation of 30,000 and the directory would 
appear to justify the Claim. It contains 
aiphabetically,-street and business divis- 
ee is conyentently arranged, well print- 

neatly bound- and will be found of 
pontng value..to..those..who have. ecoasion 
to “turn up” Vancouver sames and ad- 
dresses. The price is $1 postpaid and the 
directory may be obtained. frdém_ the 
News-Advertiser Co: 

Leghorn, Italy, Aug. 14—Admiral 
Dewey is ill with fever and to-day re- 
mained on bourd the flagship Olympia, 
which arrived here at noon yesterday 
from Naples, The captain of the vessel 
received the visits of officials and others 
in the admiral’s place. 


Consrannus. 


Per steamer’ Utopia from 


the Sound— 
Nicholies & 
Renouf, KR Baker & Son, 8 Lelser & Co, 
P McQuade & Son, Geo © Hinton, Hick- 
wan Tye H Go, Vie B & B Co, Pichon & 
Oo, Prey Cigar Co, J.H Told & Son, T F 
falds Hu B- Levy, Lent & Lelser, David. 
Spender, T N Hibben & Co, Weller Bros, 
A & W Wilson, J H McDonough, ey 
berg & Co, OB Ormund, A W Knight, 

Fawcett, Fred Parker, C A Lombard, “thd 


& News Co, ~ ~ 


—=—— 
Per atr. Utopia from the 
Mrs Dunkins, J A Armstrong, Mrs Arm- 
strong, LLL Witteman, J F Muros, J Gat- 
ton, A. Dodd, PJ Hawkins, M L Crawford, | 
G H King, H M Slave Mrs Slauson, 
Mrs King, Miss Staples, W Ahern, Mrs 


Ahern, 8 Werdins, H E Matdeus, R Lalnar, | 


Mre W Reed, A F Boughman, J A Mercer, 
Mrs Finwick, Mrs L Brock, H Calvert, 
© D Calons, Mrs Mins, W Lowrey, Mrs 
Bissett, Miss Bissett, Mrs Willis, J # Wil. 
son, Wileon, T H Davis, 0 Hagsard, Mre' 
Rush, Miss Scott, W P Davis, Miss: Bar- 
ron, Miss Doren, F S Bayley, Mre Bayley, | 


Sound (Saturdas},j 


In bonuses and lois in the city, anc 
offer the easiest terms. 


| If You Want a Bargain 


We have it for you. Money to lan 
in sume to sult at low rate of Inter 
eat. 


F. G. RICHARDS & CO., 


Real Rstdté and Insurance Agents. 
| P.O. Box 482. 1h Broad Street. 


REMOVAL... 


SET lee Aes SeapaN mem CPOE ATR -Be-COs; 


Mre-Bates, Mra-Shanton, G H Morris. 
Prank Morris, A T Falcon, Miss Willams, 

Per steamer Islander tren Vancouver— 
Saturday—W J Nichols, Miss Hall, Master 
Hall, ‘Wing Chong, 
A U Homer, R F Stupart, 
wR 
W A Piggon, W Baldwin, E W Jeffery, 
3 D Gls, Mrs McGregor, Miss McGregor, 
Wm Dons, Mrs Work, 
Mre C H Ailen, Mr Campbell, Mrs Colcutt, 
J Coleutt, GG Faultener, G H Scott,-Mr | 
Aronyu, Mr Richards, A © Bode, J H Me- 
Gregor, B Brooks,.B Beers, RB Berka, H 
Il. Ralmon, Mgr Pwenuel, J MeDonald, H 
FH Plev, -4 Olver; hr Powell, M-Mandevitie; 
FP Harrison, Mr Streatheld, J B Shigids, 
Mra Shields, Rev W H Ports; R W Ray- 
mond, J Newman, W_A Hilmer, 
Mre Groville, J. Musgrave, J © Adams, 
Mrs Smith, D Manson, Dr Harrington, 
Mrs H H Rowley, © Prost, J: Boonymaa, 
Miss B Munsey, A A Davidson, Mrs W G 
Cameron, W G Cameron, Mra Blackwood, 
frank Cameron, Mrs Gillis, Mabel Camer- 
on, WG McKenzie, W RB Houston. 

Per steamer Tees from Skagway—A Zim 
merman, Me Ddamond, W Haslett, A 8 
Monre, A © McDonald, N MeArthar, Mrs 
TY 1 Thomas, Mrs W. J Somerville, Miss 
Clara. Hiscock; Mise R Lambert, WG 
Allan, Janyes Wilson, J J Craft, J, v 
Clarke, W J’ Wortman, F Sketch, B Cbul- 
ter, W P L,Saenders, © A Melntyre, In 
Healy, E B Dilley, Mrs Dilley, A BE Greew, 
G Anderson, & Green, A Prescott, Frank. 
Burnette, EF G Miller, 
Christlo, M M Daley, D Kilgour, J Glites- 
ple, G/Ktiodamuir, © Peterson, L McGrath, 
John Mardock, J H Hammerséai, H May- 
oer, LM Lewle, HW Thorndike, G W Ash: 
ley, F Phillips, B Crockford, JH’ Brown, 


G H Roberts, 


G@ Wilson, FG Vernon, | 


Merrick, FP Hodgins CD" Pickels, | 


Mts R-B Berks, | 


A. Greville, 


A H-Preston, J A 


Late of Store Street, have removed to 
| 42 YATES STREET, 


R—Danemore, Wim -MicCormack,_t Melauis, 
TA Mclonis, _A—Hetin,_J. Chalmers, E RK 
Kose, J D Wilson, T Allen, A Layre, W 
Hayward, T [+ Foster, ® Setter. 

Per steamer Islander from Vaucouver— 
| Sunday—Nelson Lacrosse Chub, Reosalawh 

iw ataon, W Waterman, W,A Carlyle, Mre 

Carlyle, A Wilson, Mr RgFh, J H Careweh, 

H ‘W Gertharat, J K Meclauenilea, G W 
/ Laiviin, J Scott, KR Yameson, WH Cults 
| end wife, M Lang, Hon A Henderson, G 
H Cottriti and wife, J-C Qonling, Jos 
Martin, A L Potts, J Suillvan, wife and 
children, Jno Miller, H Briggs, BE Vigor. 
A Baxter, Mrs Vou Hecke, J Von Hecke. 
|X Brown, Mrs Lover, Miss Bvileigh, Miss 
| Nesbit, Mrs J K Mitchell, J B Hisse, Mrs 
Wooldridge, F Belfrey, Mrs ‘Woods, G_E 
Potte, W B McLaughiln, W M McConnon, 
J Dockins, — Canossa, R B Lester, Major 
Pellatt, Mrs Vincens!, Miss Fraser, D H 
; Walbridge, Wm Allet, Mrs Danlop, R Dun- 
|B G B Corbould, J A -Donaldson, B I 


Chapman, J B Holt, Mr Jeffreys, P Burns, 
M Thompson, Chas. Wilson, W Warden, 
H MeNell, Wm Skelland, A M Billey- 
Capt Tatiow, Jas Tupper, Mra ‘Chapman. 
T Breen, G M Asselle, R Gilmore, J Con 
nell, Mise Lorie, Mre Tedwin, Miss Ted- 
win, WR Orveen. 


hair removed by | #lec- 


—Superimectric, Parlors, 114 Yatew 
ng *. 


trolysia, “ Electric 


a 


Te 


Feed and Provisions... 


Davies, Mrs Robertson, E Chapman, Mrs _ 


Cr er eee Sean aie tee ste ae eertpsseict oncom gen eat Ac a mene pence Aan A A PERE PRES BAS A Ree SS 


LD) R Ker, J Coughian, © W Hutchison, A A